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{{Short description|Serbian nationalist concept for a Serb state}}
[[File:Greater Serbia claims and formerly held.png|thumb|250px|Map of both territories claimed by proponents of a Greater Serbia as well as territories historically held by Serb states. This includes territories held by the [[Serbian Empire]] under [[Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia|Dušan]], by the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] in 1918, Serb claims to [[Vojna Krajina]], Serb claims to [[Slavonia]] and the unrecognized [[Republic of Serbian Krajina]], and other Serb nationalist claims by [[Chetniks]] in [[World War II]] and by [[Vojislav Šešelj]].]]
{{Other uses|Serbia (disambiguation)}}
[[File:Map of Greater Serbia (in Yugoslavia).svg|thumb|upright=1.35|One of the visions of the borders of Greater Serbia as advocated by Serbian Radical politician [[Vojislav Šešelj]], defined by the [[Greater Serbia#Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line|Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag]] hypothetical boundary to the west.]]
The term '''Greater Serbia''' or '''Great Serbia''' ({{langx|sr|Велика Србија|Velika Srbija}}) describes the [[Serbian nationalism|Serbian nationalist]] and [[irredentism|irredentist]] [[ideology]] of the creation of a Serb [[State (polity)|state]] which would incorporate all regions of traditional significance to [[Serbs]], a [[South Slavic people|South Slavic]] [[ethnic group]], including regions outside modern-day [[Serbia]] that are partly populated by Serbs.{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|pp=167–168}} The initial movement's main ideology (Pan-[[Serbism]]) was to unite all Serbs (or all territory historically ruled, seen to be populated by, or perceived to be belonging to Serbs) into one [[Sovereign state|state]], claiming, depending on the version, different areas of many surrounding countries, regardless of non-Serb populations present.


The Greater Serbian ideology includes claims to various territories aside from modern-day Serbia, including the whole of the former [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]] except [[Slovenia]] and part of [[Croatia]]. According to [[Jozo Tomasevich]], in some historical forms, Greater Serbian aspirations also included parts of [[Albania]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Hungary]] and [[Romania]].{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|p=168}} Its inspiration comes from the medieval [[Serbian Empire]] which existed briefly in 14th-century [[Southeast Europe]] from 1346 to 1371, prior to the [[Ottoman conquest of the Balkans]]. Some territories intended to be incorporated in the Greater Serbia exceeded the boundaries of the Serbian Empire, however.
The term '''Greater Serbia''' or '''Great Serbia''' ({{lang-sr|Велика Србија}}, ''Velika Srbija'') applies to [[Serbian nationalism|nationalist]] and [[irredentism|irredentist]] [[ideology]] directed towards the creation of a [[Serbia]]n land which would incorporate all regions of traditional significance to the Serbian nation. This movement's main ideology is to [[Pan-Serbism|unite all Serbs]] (or all [[Political entities inhabited or ruled by Serbs|historically ruled or Serb populated lands]]) into one [[Sovereign state|state]], claiming, depending on the version, different areas of many surrounding countries.


==Historical perspective==
The Greater Serbian ideology including claims to territories of modern day [[Croatia]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[Montenegro]], [[Republic of Macedonia|Macedonia]] and [[Kosovo]]{{ref label|status|a|}}. In some historical forms, Greater Serbian aspirations also included territories of [[Albania]], [[Romania]], [[Bulgaria]] and [[Hungary]]. Its inspiration comes from the memory and existence of the relatively large and powerful [[Serbian Empire]] that existed in 14th Century south-eastern Europe prior to the Ottoman invasion.
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2020}}
{{See also|History of Serbs|Serbian historiography}}
[[File:Map of the Serbian Empire, University of Belgrade, 1922.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|right|A map of the 14th-century [[Serbian Empire]]]]


Following the growing nationalistic tendency in Europe from the 18th century onwards, such as the [[Unification of Italy]], Serbia – after first gaining its [[Principality of Serbia|principality]] within the Ottoman Empire in 1817 – experienced a popular desire for full unification with the Serbs of the remaining territories, mainly those living in neighbouring entities.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cole |first1=Jeffrey E. |title=Ethnic Groups of Europe: An Encyclopedia |date=2011 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-59884-303-3 |page=335 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M9fDifnkMJMC&pg=PA335}}</ref>
Throughout history, attempts to achieve a Greater Serbia were related to [[Serbian war crimes|war crimes]] carried out on [[ethnic]] and [[religious]] grounds (primarily against [[Albanians]], [[Croat]]s and [[Bosniak]]s) (much as attempts by the latter groups have resulted in war crimes against the [[Serbs]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.archive.org/details/reportofinternat00inteuoft |title=Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan War |publisher=Archive.org |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref><ref>[http://sr.wikisource.org/sr-el/%D0%98%D0%BD%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D1%83%D0%BA%D1%86%D0%B8%D1%98%D0%B0_%D0%94._%D0%9C%D0%B8%D1%85%D0%B0%D0%B8%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%9B%D0%B0_%D0%9F%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%BB%D1%83_%D0%82%D1%83%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%88%D0%B8%D1%9B%D1%83_%D0%BE%D0%B4_20.12.1941 Draža Mihajlović's "Instructions" of 1941, ordering the ethnic cleansing of Bosniaks, Croats, and others.]{{dead link|date=August 2010}}</ref><ref name="UN">{{cite web |url=http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/IV.htm |title=Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780 |last=Bassiouni |first=Cherif |date=28 December 1994 |publisher=United Nations |accessdate=10 May 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://sim.law.uu.nl/sim/caselaw/tribunalen.nsf/ae4b0f7b22afa1cdc12571b500329d5e/c981de518300b541c12571fe004c8dc7?OpenDocument |title=Decision of the ICTY Appeals Chamber; 18 April 2002 |publisher=Sim.law.uu.nl |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>


The idea of territorial expansion of Serbia was formulated in 1844 in [[Načertanije]], a secret political draft of the [[Principality of Serbia]] made by [[Ilija Garašanin]], a conservative statesman with [[Otto Von Bismarck|Bismarckian]] aspirations.<ref name="Djilas">{{cite book |last1=Djilas |first1=Aleksa |title=The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution, 1919-1953 |date=1991 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-67416-698-1 |page=29 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NB_TCBY-jooC&pg=PA29}}</ref> According to the draft, the new Serbian state could include the neighboring areas of [[Montenegro]], Northern [[Albania]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/batakovic/batakovic-nacertanije_eng.html |title=Ilija Garasanin's "Nacertanije": A Reasessment |publisher=Rastko.org.rs |access-date=2010-08-04 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140107164026/http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/batakovic/batakovic-nacertanije_eng.html |archive-date=2014-01-07 }}</ref> In the early 20th century, all political parties of the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] (except for the [[Serbian Social Democratic Party (Kingdom of Serbia)|Social Democratic Party]]) were planning to create a [[Balkan Federation]], generally accepted the idea of uniting all Serbs into one only Serbian state which would be a part of the Balkan federation.{{sfn|Banac|1988|p=110}} From the creation of the Principality until the First World War, the territory of Serbia was constantly expanding.{{sfn|Anzulovic|1999|p=89}}
== Historical perspective ==
Following the growing nationalistic tendency in [[Europe]] from the 18th century onwards, such as the [[Unification of Italy]], Serbia - after first gaining its [[Principality of Serbia|principality]] within the Ottoman Empire in 1817 - experienced a popular desire for full unification with the Serbs of the remaining territories, mainly those living in neighbouring entities.


After the end of the [[Balkan Wars]], the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] achieved the expansion towards the south,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Frucht |first1=Richard C. |title=Eastern Europe - Volume 3 |date=2005 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-57607-800-6 |page=540 |quote=..the two Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913 , which expanded Serbian territory to the south..}}</ref> but there was a mixed reaction to the events, for the reason that the promises of lands gaining access to the [[Adriatic Sea]] were not fulfilled. Instead, Serbia received the territories of [[Vardar Macedonia]] that was intended to become part of the [[Kingdom of Bulgaria]] and the [[Serbian Army]] had to leave those coastal territories that would become part of the newly formed [[Principality of Albania]]. This event, together with the Austro-Hungarian [[Annexation of Bosnia]], frustrated Serbian aspirations, since there was still a large number of Serbs remaining out of the Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Duiker |first1=William J. |last2=Spielvogel |first2=Jackson J. |title=World History, Volume II: Since 1500 |date=2015 |publisher=Nelson Education |isbn=978-1-30553-780-4 |page=569 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yJVvCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT218}}</ref>
[[Image:Pashaluk of Belgrade and teritorial annexion in 1833.png|thumb|desno|The [[Principality of Serbia]] mid-19th century.]]


The Serbian victory in the First World War was supposed to serve as compensation to this situation and there was an open debate between the followers of the Greater Serbia doctrine, that defended the incorporation of the parts of the defeated Austro-Hungarian Empire where Serbs lived to Serbia, opposed by the ones that supported an idea of uniting not only all the Serbian lands, but also to include other [[South Slav]] nations into a new country. {{citation needed|date=May 2012}}
The idea of territorial expansion of Serbia originally formulated 1844 in [[Načertanije]], a secret political program of the [[Principality of Serbia]], according to which the new Serbian state could include the neighboring areas of [[Montenegro]], Northern [[Albania]], [[Bosnia]] and [[Herzegovina]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/batakovic/batakovic-nacertanije_eng.html |title=Ilija Garasanin's "Nacertanije": A Reasessment |publisher=Rastko.org.rs |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref> In the early 20th century, all political parties of the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] (except for the [[Social Democratic Party]]) planning to create a [[Balkan Federation]], generally accepted the idea of uniting all Serbs into one only Serbian state.<ref>{{cite book |title=The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics |last=Banač |first=Ivo |year=1988 |publisher=Cornell University Press |page=110 |isbn=0801494931}}</ref> From the creation of the Principality until the [[First World War]], the territory of Serbia was constantly expanding.<ref>{{cite book |title=Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide |last=Anzulovic |first=Branimir |year=1999 |publisher=New York University Press |page=89 |isbn=0814706711}}</ref>
[[File:Greater Serbia, Miloš Milojević (1873).jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|[[Miloš Milojević (lawyer)|Miloš Milojević]]'s 19th-century map which depicts most of the [[South Slavs]] as [[Serbs]].]]
The Serbian Royal family of [[Karađorđević]] was set to rule this new state, called [[Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]], that would be renamed to the [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]] in 1929. Initially, the proponents of the Greater Serbia doctrine felt satisfied, since the main goal of uniting all Serbian-inhabited lands under the rule of a Serbian Monarchic dynasty was mostly achieved. During the inter-war period, the majority of Serbian politicians defended a strong centralised country, while their opponents demanded major autonomy for the regions.


Following the [[Invasion of Yugoslavia|German-led invasion of Yugoslavia]] in 1941, these tensions grew to become one of the most brutal civil wars that occurred in World War II. The Royal Government soon capitulated and fled to [[Yugoslav government-in-exile|exile in London]]. Resistance was initially made by the [[Chetniks]], who defended the restoration of the Monarchy but would eventually collaborate with the Axis powers with the goal of forming a post-war Greater Serbia, and the [[Partisans (Yugoslavia)|Partisans]], a multi-ethnic antifascist movement who waged a guerrilla campaign against occupying forces and supported the transformation of Yugoslavia into a [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|socialist federal republic]]. The Serbs were largely divided into these two factions with differing ideologies and goals, leading to internal fighting. Others found themselves in the collaborationist factions of [[Milan Nedić]] and [[Dimitrije Ljotić]] such as the [[Serbian Volunteer Corps (World War II)|Serbian Volunteer Corps]]. Beside this, other Yugoslav non-Serb nationalists took advantage of the situation and allied themselves with the Axis countries, regarding this moment as their historical opportunity of fulfilling their own irredentist aspirations. Another portion of non-Serbs also fought under the Partisan movement towards a united communist-led Yugoslavia.{{citation needed|date=May 2012}}
After the end of the [[Balkan Wars]], the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] achieved the expantion towards the south, but there was a mixed reaction to the events, for the reason that the promises of lands gaining access to the [[Adriatic Sea]] were not fulfilled. Instead, Serbia received the territories of [[Vardar Macedonia]] that was intended to become part of the [[Kingdom of Bulgaria]] and the [[Serbian Army]] had to leave those coastal territories that would become part of the newly formed [[Kingdom of Albania]]. This event, together with the Austro-Hungarian [[Annexation of Bosnia]], frustrated the majority of Serbian politicians, since there was still a large number of Serbs remaining out of the Kingdom.


After the war, victorious Partisan leader Marshal [[Josip Broz Tito]] became the head of state of Yugoslavia until his death in 1980. During this period the country was divided in six republics. In 1976, within the [[SR Serbia|Socialist Republic of Serbia]] two autonomous provinces, [[SAP Kosovo]] and [[SAP Vojvodina]], were created. During this period, most of the Greater Serbian ideology followers were incarcerated as accused of betrayal, or exiled. Within the rest of the Serbian population, the vast majority became strong supporters of this new [[Non-Aligned Movement|Non-Aligned]] Yugoslavia.{{citation needed|date=May 2012}}
The Serbian victory in the [[First World War]] was supposed to serve as compensation to this situation and there was an open debate between the followers of the Greater Serbia doctrine, that defended the incorporation of the parts of the defeated Austro-Hungarian Empire where Serbs lived to Serbia, opposed by the ones that supported an idea of uniting not only all the Serbian lands, but also to include other [[South Slav]] nations into a new country. Among other reasons, but also because of the fear of the creation of a bigger and stronger [[Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] [[Serbia]], that could eventually became a [[Russian Empire|Russian]] allied, the decision of making an ethnically mixed South Slav state, where other nationalities would balance the Serb hegemony, was made.


==History==
The Serbian Royal family of [[Karađorđević]] was set to rule this new state, called [[Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]], that would be renamed to the [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]] in 1929. Initially, the apologists of the Greater Serbia doctrine felt satisfied, since the main goal of uniting all Serbian-inhabited lands under the rule of a Serbian Monarchic dynasty was mostly achieved. During the inter-war period, the majority of Serbian politicians defended a strong centralised country, while their opponents demanded major autonomy for the regions. This tension grew to a point that led to the creation of opposing nationalistic organisations that culminated in the [[assassination]] of the [[Alexander I of Yugoslavia|King Alexander I]] in 1934.


===Obradović's Pan-Serbism===
When the [[German invasion of Yugoslavia]] happened in 1941, these tensions grew to become in one of the most brutal civil wars that occurred in the [[World War Two]]. The Royal Governament soon capitulated, and the resistance was mainly made by the [[Cetniks|Četniks]], who defended the restoration of the Monarchy, and the [[Partisans (Yugoslavia)|Partisans]], who supported the creation of a communist Yugoslav state. The Serbs were divided into these two factions, that fought not only the [[Nazi Germany]] and all the other neighbour Axis allied countries which also invaded different territories of Yugoslavia — the [[Italy|Italians]], [[Hungary|Hungarins]] and [[Bulgaria]]ns — but also each other. Beside this, other Yugoslav non-Serb nationalists took advantage of the situation and allied themselves with the Axis countries, regarding this moment as their historical opportunity of fulfilling their own irredentist aspirations, the [[Independent State of Croatia]] being by far the most brutal one.
<!-- [[Pan-Serbism]] redirects here -->
The first person to formulate the modern idea of '''Pan-Serbism''' was [[Dositej Obradović]] (1739–1811), a writer and thinker who dedicated his writings to the "Slavoserbian people", which he described as "the inhabitants of Serbia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Montenegro, Dalmatia, Croatia, Syrmium, Banat, and Bačka", and who he regarded as all his "Serbian brethren, regardless of their church and religion". Other proponents of Pan-Serbism included historian [[Jovan Rajić]] and politician and lawyer [[Sava Tekelija]], both of whom published works incorporating many of the aforementioned areas under a single umbrella name of "Serbian lands".{{sfn|Anzulovic|1999|pp=71–73}}
The concept of Pan-Serbism espoused by these three was not an imperialist one, based upon the notion of Serbian conquest, but a rationalist one. They all believed that [[rationalism]] would overcome the barriers of religion that separated the Slavs into Orthodox Christians, Catholics, and Muslims, uniting the peoples as one nation.


The idea of a unification and homogenization by force was propounded by [[Petar II Petrović-Njegoš]] (1813–1851).{{sfn|Anzulovic|1999|pp=71–73}}
After the war, victorious Partisan leader [[Josip Broz Tito|Marshal Tito]] became the head of state of Yugoslavia until his death in 1980. During this period the country was divided in six republics. In 1976, within the [[SR Serbia|Socialist Republic of Serbia]] two autonomous provinces, [[SAP Kosovo]] and [[SAP Vojvodina]], were created. During this period, most of the Greater Serbian ideology followers were incarcerated as accused of betrayall, or exiled. Within the rest of the Serbian population, the vast majority became strong supporters of this new [[Non-Aligned Movement|Non-Aligned]] [[Yugoslavia]].


===Garašanin's Načertanije===
During the [[Yugoslav Wars]] of the 1990s, Serbia stood accused of attempting to create the entity of a ''Greater Serbia'' through Belgrade's direct involvement with the unrecognised Serbian entities functioning in [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] and [[Croatia]].<ref name="Šešelj ICTY Case information sheet"/>
{{Wikisource|Načertanije}}
[[File:Map of the Serb population, 1862, H. Thiers.png|thumb|upright=1.15|French map with the supposed borders of the medieval [[Serbian Empire]] marked in red, and the supposed Serbian populated-areas coloured green, which more or less corresponds to areas inhabited by all [[South Slavs]].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite book |title=La Serbie: Son Passé et Son Avenir |last=Thiers |first=Henri |year=1862 |publisher=Dramard-Baudry}}</ref>]]


Some authors claim that the roots of the Greater Serbian ideology can be traced back to Serbian minister [[Ilija Garašanin]]'s ''Načertanije'' (1844).{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=3}} ''Načertanije'' (Начертаније) was influenced by "''Conseils sur la conduite a suivre par la Serbie''", a document written by [[Polish people|Polish]] Prince [[Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski|Adam Czartoryski]] in 1843 and the revised version by Polish ambassador to Serbia, [[František Zach|Franjo Zach]], "''Zach's Plan''".{{sfn|Anzulovic|1999|p=91}}{{sfn|Trencsenyi|Kopecek|2007|p=240}}
== Development of Greater Serbian ideology ==
=== Garašanin's Načertanije ===
{{Main|Načertanije}}
[[Image:Greater Serbia.png|thumb|French map of Greater Serbia (1862) with the supposed borders of the medieval [[Serbian Empire]].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite book |title=La Serbie: Son Passé et Son Avenir |last=Thiers |first=Henri |year=1862 |publisher=Dramard-Baudry}}</ref>]]


{{blockquote| "A plan must be constructed which does not limit Serbia to her present borders, but endeavors to absorb all the Serbian people around her."{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=3}}|[[Ilija Garašanin]], ''Načertanije''}}
Roots of the Greater Serbian ideology are often traced back to [[Serbia]]n minister [[Ilija Garašanin]]'s ''[[Načertanije]]'' (1844).<ref name=cohen>{{cite book |last1=Cohen |first1=Philip J. |last2=Riesman |first2=David |title=Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History |publisher=[[Texas A&M University Press]] |year=1996 |isbn=0890967601}}</ref>{{Rp|3}} ''[[Načertanije]]'' was influenced by "''Conseils sur la conduite a suivre par la Serbie''", a document written by [[Poles|Polish]] Prince [[Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski|Adam Czartoryski]] in 1843 and the revised version by Polish ambassador to Serbia, [[Franjo Zach]], "''Zach's Plan''".<ref name=anzulovic>{{cite book |title=Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide |last=Anzulovic |first=Branimir |year=2001 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=186403100X}}</ref>{{Rp|91}}<ref name=velikonja>{{cite book |title=Religious Separation and Political Intolerance in Bosnia-Herzegovina |last=Velikonja |first=Mitja |year=1992 |publisher=Texas A&M University Press |isbn=1585442267}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe (1770-1945), Texts and Commentaries, Volume I |last=Trencsényi |first=Balázs |year=2006 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=963732660X}}</ref>{{Rp|240}} From the 1850s onward, this concept has had a significant influence on Serbian politics.


The work claimed lands that were inhabited by Bulgarians, Macedonians, Albanians, Montenegrins, Bosnians, Hungarians and Croats as part of Greater Serbia.{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=3}} Garašanin's plan also included methods of spreading Serbian influence in the claimed lands.{{sfn|Cohen|1996|pp=3–4}} He proposed ways to influence Croats and Slavic Muslims, who Garašanin regarded as "Serbs of Catholic faith" and "Serbs of Islamic faith".{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=3}} The document also emphasized the necessity of cooperation between the Balkan nations and it advocated that the Balkans should be governed by the nations from the Balkans.<ref>{{cite book|last=Deretić|first=Jovan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zI7pAAAACAAJ&q=Kulturna+istorija+Srba|title=Kulturna istorija Srba|date=2005|publisher=Narodna knjiga|page=257|language=en}}</ref>
{{cquote2| "A plan must be constructed which does not limit Serbia to her present borders, but endeavors to absorb all the Serbian people around her."<ref name=cohen/>{{Rp|3}} |[[Ilija Garašanin]], ''[[Načertanije]]''}}


This plan was kept secret until 1906 and has been interpreted by some as a blueprint for Serbian national unification, with the primary concern of strengthening Serbia's position by inculcating Serbian and pro-Serbian national ideology in all surrounding peoples that are considered to be devoid of national consciousness.{{sfn|Anzulovic|1999|p=91}}{{sfn|Cohen|1996|pp=3–4}} Because ''Načertanije'' was a secret document until 1906, it could not have affected national consciousness at the popular level. However, some scholars suggest that from the second half of the nineteenth century to the outbreak of World War I, “leading political groups and social strata in Serbia were thoroughly imbued with the ideas in the Nacertanije and differed only in intensity of feeling and political conceptualization”.{{sfn|Manetovic|2006|p=145}} Political insecurity, more so than Yugoslavism or Serbian nationalism, appeared to be the prevailing reasoning behind the idea of expanding Serbian borders.{{sfn|Manetovic|2006|p=160}} The document is one of the most contested of nineteenth-century Serbian history, with rival interpretations.{{sfn|Trencsenyi|Kopecek|2007|p=239}} Some scholars argue that Garašanin was an inclusive Yugoslavist, while others maintain that he was an exclusive Serbian nationalist seeking a Greater Serbia.{{sfn|Manetovic|2006|p=137}}
The work claimed lands that were inhabited by Bulgarians, Macedonians, Albanians, Montenegrins, Bosnians, Hungarians and Croats as part of Greater Serbia.<ref name=cohen/>{{Rp|3}} Garašanin's plan also includes methods of spreading Serbian influence in the claimed lands.<ref name=cohen/>{{Rp|3-4}} He proposed ways to influence Croats and Slavic Muslims, who Garašanin regarded as "Serbs of Catholic faith" and "Serbs of Islamic faith".<ref name=cohen/>{{Rp|3}} This plan was kept secret until 1967 and has been interpreted by some as a blueprint for Serbian national unification, with the primary concern of strengthening Serbia's position by inculcating Serbian and pro-Serbian national ideology in all surrounding peoples that are considered to be devoid of national consciousness.<ref name=cohen/>{{Rp|3-4}}<ref name=anzulovic/>{{Rp|91}}


=== Vuk Karadžić's pan-Serbism ===
===Vuk Karadžić's Pan-Serbism===
<!-- [[Vuk Karadžić's Pan-Serbism]] redirects here -->
The most notable Serbian linguist of the 19th century, [[Vuk Karadžić]], was a follower of the view that all south Slavs that speak the [[Shtokavian dialect]] (of [[Serbo-Croatian]]) were Serbs, speaking the [[Serbian language]].{{sfn|Banac|1992|p=144}} As this definition implied that large areas of continental Croatia, [[Dalmatia]], and Bosnia and Herzegovina, including areas inhabited by Roman Catholics – Vuk Karadžić is considered by some to be the progenitor of the Greater Serbia program. More precisely, Karadžić was the shaper of modern secular Serbian national consciousness, with the goal of incorporating all indigenous Shtokavian speakers (Eastern Orthodox, Catholic, Muslim) into one, modern Serbian nation. German historian Michael Weithmann
considers that Karadžić expressed dangerous ideological and political idea in scientific shape ie that all southern Slavs are Serbs while Czech historian Jan Rychlik consider that Karadžić became a propagator of greater Serbian ideology and uttered a theory according to which all Yugoslav people speaking the shtokavian dialect are Serbs.{{sfn|Melichárek|2015|p=59}}


[[File:Shtokavian Subdialect en.png|thumb|upright=1.15|right|[[Shtokavian dialect]], whose speakers [[Vuk Karadžić|Vuk]] considered [[Serbs]] in the 19th century.]]
The most notable Serbian linguist of the 19th century, [[Vuk Karadžić]], was a follower of the view that all south Slavs that speak the [[Shtokavian dialect|štokavian dialect]] (in the [[Serbo-Croatian language|central south Slavic language group]]) are Serbs who speak the [[Serbian language]]. As this definition implied that large areas of continental [[Croatia]] and [[Dalmatia]], as well as [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], including areas inhabited by Roman Catholics - Vuk Karadžić is considered by some to be the progenitor of the Greater Serbia program. More precisely, Karadžić was the shaper of modern secular Serbian national consciousness, with the goal of incorporating all indigenous štokavian speakers (Eastern Orthodox, Catholic, Muslim) into one, modern Serbian nation. It should be noted that this linguistic definition of nation would have excluded parts of southern Serbia where the [[Torlak dialect]] is spoken.
{{blockquote|There are at least 5 million people who speak the same language, but by religion they can be split into three groups ... Only the first 3 million call themselves [[Serbs]], but the rest will not accept the name.<ref>{{cite web |author=Danijela Nadj |url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/karadzic.htm |title=Vuk Karadzic, Serbs All and Everywhere (1849) |publisher=Hic.hr |access-date=2010-08-04 |archive-date=2012-02-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205182105/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/karadzic.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>|[[Vuk Karadžić]], ''Srbi svi i svuda'' (Serbs All and Everywhere)}}


This view is not shared by Andrew Baruch Wachtel (''Making a Nation, Breaking a Nation'') who sees him as a partisan of South Slav unity, albeit in a limited sense, in that his linguistic definition emphasized what united South Slavs rather than the religious differences that had earlier divided them. However, one might argue that such a definition is very partisan: Karadžić himself eloquently and explicitly professed that his aim was to unite all native Shtokavian speakers whom he identified as ''Serbs''. Therefore, Vuk Karadžić's central linguistic-political aim was the growth of the realm of Serbdom according to his ethnic-linguistic ideas and not a unity of any sort between Serbs and the other nations.
[[Image:Shtokavian Subdialect en.png|thumb|desno|[[Shtokavian dialect]], whose speakers [[Vuk Karadžić|Vuk]] considered Serbs.]]


===Balkan Wars===
{{cquote2|There are at least 5 million people who speak the same language, but by religion they can be split into three groups ... Only the first 3 million call themselves [[Serbs]], but the rest will not accept the name.<ref>{{cite web|author=Danijela Nadj|url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/karadzic.htm |title=Vuk Karadzic, Serbs All and Everywhere (1849) |publisher=Hic.hr |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>|[[Vuk Karadzic]], ''Srbi svi i svuda'' (Serbs All and Everywhere)}}
{{Main article|Serbia in the Balkan Wars}}
[[File:Serbian aspirations 1912.jpg|thumb|upright=1.15|right|Greater Serbian aspirations before the [[Balkan Wars]] 1912–1913, according to the [[Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars]].<ref name="Report"/>]]
The idea of reclaiming historic Serbian territory has been put into action several times during the 19th and 20th centuries, notably in Serbia's southward expansion in the [[Balkan Wars]]. Serbia claimed "historical rights" to the possession of [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], acquired by [[Stephen Dušan]] in fourteenth century.<ref name="Report">{{cite book |title=Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan War |author=Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |year=1914 |publisher=Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |url=https://archive.org/details/reportofinternat00inteuoft}}</ref>{{Rp|25–27}}


{{blockquote|...for economic independence, Serbia must acquire access to the [[Adriatic Sea]] and one part of the Albanian coastline: by occupation of the territory or by acquiring economic and transportation rights to this region. This, therefore, implies occupying an ethnographically foreign territory, but one that must be occupied due to particularly important economic [[interest]]s and vital needs.<ref>{{cite web |author=Danijela Nadj |url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/cvijic.htm |title=Jovan Cvijić, Selected statements |publisher=Hic.hr |access-date=2010-08-04 |archive-date=2010-12-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231233639/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/cvijic.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>|[[Jovan Cvijić]]}}
This negative view is not shared by Andrew Baruch Wachtel (''Making a Nation, Breaking a Nation'') who sees him as a partisan of South Slav unity, albeit in a limited sense, in that his linguistic definition emphasized what united South Slavs rather than the religious differences that had earlier divided them. However, one might argue that such a definition is very partisan: Karadžić himself eloquently and explicitly professed that his aim was to unite all native štokavian speakers whom he identified as ''Serbs''. Therefore, Vuk Karadžić's central linguistic-political aim was the growth of the realm of Serbdom according to his ethnic-linguistic ideas and not a unity of any sort between Serbian, Croatian or other nations. It has often been suggested that the Muslims of Bosnia are the descendants of Serbs who converted from [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox Christianity]] to [[Islam]] under the rule of the [[Ottoman Empire]].<ref>Note that Croatian nationalists claim something very similar, except involving [[Catholicism]] rather than Orthodoxy.</ref> Such views have been used to claim ownership of lands inhabited by other peoples (sometimes subsequently, sometimes not), much to the dismay of those inhabitants.


Serbia gained significant territorial expansion in the Balkan Wars and almost doubled its territory, with the areas populated mostly by non-Serbs ([[Albanians]], [[Bulgarians]], [[Turkish people|Turks]] and others).<ref name="Report"/>{{Rp|159–164}} Serbia's most important goal of the Balkan Wars was access to the open sea.{{sfn|Antić|2010}} so the Kingdom of Serbia occupied most of the interior of Albania and Albania's [[Adriatic coast]]. A series of [[massacres of Albanians in the Balkan Wars]] were committed by the [[Serbian Army|Serbian]] and [[Montenegrin Army]].<ref name="Report"/> According to the [[Report of the International Commission on the Balkan Wars]], Serbia consider annexed territories "as a dependency, a sort of conquered colony, which these conquerors might administer at their good pleasure".<ref name="Report"/> Newly acquired territories were subjected to [[Martial law|military government]], and were not included in Serbia's constitutional system.<ref name="Report"/> The opposition press demanded the [[rule of law]] for the population of the annexed territories and the extension of the [[constitution of the Kingdom of Serbia]] to these regions.<ref name="Report"/>
=== Early criticism ===


The [[Royal Serbian Army]] captured Durazzo ({{langx|sq|Durrës}}) on 29 November 1912 without any resistance.<ref>{{harvp|Antić|2010}} "Velika luka došla je bez otpora pod vlast Kraljevine Srbije... The big port fell into hands of Kingdom of Serbia without any resistance"</ref> [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] Christian metropolitan of Durrës Jakob gave a particularly warm welcome to the new authorities.<ref>{{harvp|Antić|2010}} "Novu vlast je posebno srdačno dočekao drački pravoslavni episkop Jakov. ... New authorities were particularly worm welcomed by Orthodox metropolitan Jakov"</ref> Due to Jakob's intervention to the Serbian authorities several Albanian guerrilla units were saved and avoided execution.<ref>{{citation |last1=Petros-Emmanouil|first1=Oikonomopoulos|last2=Πέτρος-Εμμανουήλ|first2=Οικονομόπουλος|script-title=el:Ο Μητροπολίτης Μυτιλήνης Ιάκωβος ο από Δυρραχίου: από την Εθναρχούσα Εκκλησία στην Εθνική|publisher=Αριστοτέλειο Πανεπιστήμιο Θεσσαλονίκης (ΑΠΘ). Σχολή Θεολογική. Τμήμα Θεολογίας. Τομέας Εκκλησιαστικής Ιστορίας, Χριστιανικής Γραμματείας Αρχαιολογίας και Τέχνης|page=80|language=el|date=2016|doi=10.12681/eadd/42197 |hdl=10442/hedi/42197|s2cid=165339712 |doi-access=free}}</ref>
Serbian writers and politicians in [[Austria-Hungary]] [[Svetozar Miletić]] and [[Mihailo Polit-Desančić]] fiercely opposed the Greater Serbia ideology, as well as the premier Serbian socialist from Serbia proper, [[Svetozar Marković]]. They all envisioned some sort of "Balkan [[confederation]]" that would include [[Serbia]], [[Bulgaria]] and sometimes [[Romania]], plus [[Vojvodina]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] and [[Croatia]], should the [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]] dissolve.


However, the army of the Kingdom of Serbia retreated from Durrës in April 1913 under pressure of the naval fleet of [[Great Powers]], but it remained in other parts of Albania for the next two months.<ref>{{harvp|Antić|2010}} "VeĆ u aprilu 1913. postalo je izvesno da je kraj "albanske operacije" blizu. Pod pritiskom flote velikih sila srpska vojska je napustila jadransko primorje. U Albaniji je, međutim, ostala još dva meseca... In April 1913 it was obvious that end of "Albanian operation" was close and army of Serbia retreated from Adriatic coast remaining in Albania for two more months."</ref>
The term Greater Serbia first appears in a derogatory manner in a book authored by a Serbian socialist [[Svetozar Marković]] in 1872. The title «Velika Srbija» (Greater Serbia) was meant to express the author's dismay at the prospect of expansion of the Serbian state without social and cultural reforms as well as possible ethnic confrontation with neighboring nations, from Croats to Bulgarians.


=== Balkan Wars ===
===Black Hand===
{{Main|Serbian occupation of Albania}}
{{Main article|Black Hand (Serbia)|Young Bosnia}}
[[Image:Serbian greater expansion 1913.png|thumb|Short-lived territorial expansion of the Kingdom of Serbia in 1913.]]


The idea of reclaiming historic Serbian territory has been put into action several times during the 19th and 20th centuries, notably in Serbia's southward expansion in the [[Balkan Wars]]. Serbia claimed "historical rights" to the possession of [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], acquired by [[Stephen Dušan]] in fourteenth century.<ref name="Report">{{cite book |title=Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan War |author=Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |year=1914 |publisher=Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |url=http://www.archive.org/details/reportofinternat00inteuoft}}</ref>{{Rp|25-27}}
The secret military society called Unity or Death, popularly known as the [[Black Hand (Serbia)|Black Hand]], headed by Serbian colonel [[Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis]], which took an active and militant stance on the issue of a Greater Serbian state. This organization is believed to have been responsible for numerous atrocities following the [[Balkan Wars]] in 1913.<ref>{{cite book |title= Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars |year=1914 |page=169 |location= Washington, D.C. |publisher= Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |url=https://archive.org/details/reportofinternat00inteuoft/page/168/mode/2up |access-date=2020-08-08 |via= Internet Archive}}</ref>


===World War I and the creation of Yugoslavia===
{{cquote2|...for economic independence, [[Serbia]] must acquire access to the [[Adriatic Sea]] and one part of the Albanian coastline: by occupation of the territory or by acquiring economic and transportation rights to this region. This, therefore, implies occupying an ethnographically foreign territory, but one that must be occupied due to particularly important economic [[interest]]s and vital needs.<ref>{{cite web|author=Danijela Nadj|url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/cvijic.htm |title=Jovan Cvijic, Selected statements |publisher=Hic.hr |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>|[[Jovan Cvijic]]}}
{{Main article|Creation of Yugoslavia|Serbianisation}}
[[File:Serbia1918.png|thumb|upright=1.15|right|In late November 1918, at the end of the [[World War I|First World War]], [[Syrmia]], [[Banat, Bačka and Baranja]], and [[Kingdom of Montenegro|Montenegro]] proclaimed its unification with the [[Kingdom of Serbia]] and entered into Yugoslavia as part of Serbia (''Note:'' the map shown – Bačka, Banat, Baranja – represents a short time period, during military demarcation, ''not the actual'' unified territory).]]


By 1914 the Greater Serbian concept was eventually replaced by the Yugoslav [[Pan-Slavism|Pan-Slavic]] movement. The change in approach was meant as a means to gain support of other Slavs which neighboured Serbs who were also occupied by Austria-Hungary. The intention to create a south Slav or "Yugoslav" state was expressed in the Niš declaration by Serbian prime minister [[Nikola Pašić]] in 1914, as well as in Serbia's regent [[Alexander I of Serbia|Alexander]]'s statement in 1916. The documents showed that Serbia would pursue a policy that would integrate all territory that contained Serbs and southern Slavs (except Bulgarians), including Croats and Slovenes.{{citation needed|date=May 2012}}
Serbia gained significant territorial expansion in the Balkan Wars and almost doubled its territory, with the areas populated mostly by non-Serbs ([[Albanians]], [[Bulgarians]], [[Turkish people|Turks]] and others).<ref name="Report"/>{{Rp|159-164}} The Kingdom of Serbia temporarily occupied most of the interior of [[Albania]] and Albania's [[Adriatic coast]]. A series of [[massacres of Albanians in the Balkan Wars]] were committed by the [[Serbian Army|Serbian]] and [[Montenegrin Army]].<ref name="Report"/> According to the [[Report of the International Commission on the Balkan Wars]], Serbia consider annexed territories "as a dependency, a sort of conquered colony, which these conquerors might administer at their good pleasure".<ref name="Report"/> Newly acquired territories were subjected to [[military government]], and were not included in Serbia's constitutional system.<ref name="Report"/> The opposition press demanded the [[rule of law]] for the population of the annexed territories and the extension of the [[constitution of the Kingdom of Serbia]] to these regions.<ref name="Report"/>


The [[Treaty of London (1915)]] of the allies would assign to Serbia the territories of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Srem, Bačka, Slavonia (against Italian objections) and northern Albania (to be divided with Montenegro).{{citation needed|date=May 2015}}
=== Black Hand ===
{{Main|Black Hand|Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria}}


After the [[World War I|First World War]], Serbia achieved a maximalist nationalist aspirations with the unification of the south Slavic regions of [[Austria-Hungary]] and [[Montenegro]], into a Serbian-dominated [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2-zAeObDX_gC&pg=PA13 |title=Richard C Hall, The Balkan Wars 1912–1913 |access-date=2010-08-04|isbn=9780415229470 |last1=Hall |first1=Richard C. |year=2000 }}</ref>
Extremist Greater Serbian nationalist groups included the secret society called the [[Black Hand]], headed by Serbian colonel Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis, which took an active and militant stance on the issue of a Greater Serbian state. This organization is believed to have been responsible for numerous atrocities following the [[Balkan Wars]] in 1913.<ref>[[Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars]] (p. 169)</ref> In 1914, [[Bosnian Serb]] Black Hand member [[Gavrilo Princip]] was responsible the assassination of Habsburg [[Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria|Archduke Franz Ferdinand]] in [[Sarajevo]], which set off an international crisis that led to the [[First World War]].


During the [[Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]], the government of the Kingdom pursued a linguistic [[Serbisation]] policy towards the Macedonians in [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]],<ref>{{cite web
=== First World War and Creation of Yugoslavia ===
{{Main|Creation of Yugoslavia|Serbianisation}}
[[File:Serbian aspirations 1912.jpg|thumb|left|Greater Serbian aspirations before the Balkan wars 1912-1913, according to the [[Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars]].<ref name="Report"/>]]
[[Image:Banovine kj.jpg|thumb|right|[[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]] was divided into regions called [[Subdivisions of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia|banovinas]] which were designed to maximize the connection of Serb populated territories as a means to reduce legitimacy of separatism by other nationalities, as the banovinas were mixed populations.]]

By 1914 the Greater Serbian concept was eventually replaced by the Yugoslav [[Pan-Slavism|Pan-Slavic]] movement. The change in approach was meant as a means to gain support of other Slavs which neighboured Serbs who were also occupied by Austria-Hungary. The intention to create a south Slav or "Yugoslav" state was expressed in the Niš declaration by Serbian premier [[Nikola Pašić]] in 1914, as well as in Serbia's regent [[Alexander I of Serbia|Aleksandar]]'s statement in 1916. The documents showed that Serbia would pursue a policy that would integrate all territory that contained Serbs and southern Slavs, including Croatians, Slovenes and Bosnian Muslims.

In 1918, the [[Triple Entente]] (Britain, France, and Russia) defeated Germany and Austria-Hungary. Serbia, which was allied with the Entente, pressured the allies to give Serbia the territory it requested. After the First World War, Serbia achieved a maximalist nationalist aspirations with the incorporation of the south Slavic regions of [[Austria-Hungary]] and [[Montenegro]], into a Serbian-dominated [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=2-zAeObDX_gC&pg=PA13&lpg=PA13&dq=massacre+albanians+1912&source=bl&ots=4Q2jsiCI70&sig=kWhNWHp1kC2nwtahvzot70aKJB8&hl=en&ei=Ao6SSv2VLKbUmgPkkfWmAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=16#v=onepage&q=&f=false |title=Richard C Hall, The Balkan Wars 1912-1913 |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref> The Allies agreed to give the lands of Slovenia, Croatia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina to Serbia. At this time Montenegro had already annexed by Serbia.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=2&res=9F06E4DE1339E133A25755C1A9629C946395D6CF&oref=slogin |title=Montenegrins' Effort to Prevent Annexation of Their Country to Serbia |publisher=New York Times |date= 1922-04-16|accessdate=2010-08-04 | first=Walter | last=Littlefield}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.montenegro.org/pictures/news1919.gif |title=Serbs wipe out royalist party in Montenegro |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>

Serbian and Yugoslav nationalists claimed that the peoples' had few differences and were only separated by religious divide imposed by occupiers. It was under this belief that Serbia believed the large annexations would be followed by [[Cultural assimilation|assimilation]]. During the [[Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]], the government of the Kingdom pursued a linguistic [[Serbisation]] policy towards the Macedonians in [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]],<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/ban/pww2.html#60
| url = http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/ban/pww2.html#60
| title = An article by Dimiter Vlahov about the persecution of the Bulgarian population in Macedonia
| title = An article by Dimiter Vlahov about the persecution of the Bulgarian population in Macedonia
| publisher = newspaper "Balkanska federatsia", No. 140, Aug.20, 1930, Vienna, original in Bulgarian
| work = Newspaper Balkanska federatsia, Vienna, No.140, August 20, 1930; the original is in Bulgarian
| accessdate = 2007-08-03
| access-date = 2007-08-03
}}</ref> then called "Southern Serbia" (unofficially) or "Vardar Banovina" (officially). The [[dialect]]s spoken in this region were referred to as dialects of [[Serbo-Croatian language|Serbo-Croatian]].<ref>Friedman, V. (1985) "The sociolinguistics of literary Macedonian" in ''International Journal of the Sociology of Language''. Vol. 52, pp. 31-57</ref>
}}</ref> then called "Southern Serbia" (unofficially) or "[[Vardar Banovina]]" (officially). The [[dialect]]s spoken in this region were referred to as dialects of [[Serbo-Croatian language|Serbo-Croatian]].<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Friedman | first1 = V | year = 1985 | title = The sociolinguistics of literary Macedonian | journal = International Journal of the Sociology of Language | volume = 1985 | issue = 52| pages = 31–57 | doi = 10.1515/ijsl.1985.52.31 | s2cid = 143667209 }}</ref>
Either way, those southern dialects were suppressed with regards education, military and other national activities, and their usage was punishable.<ref>{{cite web
Either way, those southern dialects were suppressed with regards education, military and other national activities, and their usage was punishable.<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/ban/pww2.html#50
| url = http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/ban/pww2.html#50
| title = By the Shar Mountain there is also terror and violence
| title = By the Shar Mountain there is also terror and violence
| publisher = newspaper "Makedonsko Delo", No. 58, Jan. 25, 1928, Vienna, original in Bulgarian
| publisher = newspaper "Makedonsko Delo", No. 58, Jan. 25, 1928, Vienna, original in Bulgarian
| accessdate = 2007-08-03
| access-date = 2007-08-03
}}</ref>
}}</ref>


===World War II and Moljević's Homogenous Serbia===
The concept of “Greater Serbia” was put in practice during the early 1920s, under the Yugoslav premiership of [[Nikola Pašić]]. Using tatics of police intimidation and [[vote rigging]],<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,846181,00.html Balkan Politics], ''[[TIME Magazine]]'', March 31, 1923</ref> he diminished the role of the oppositions (mainly those loyal to his Croatian rival, [[Stjepan Radić]]) to his government in parliament,<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,719894,00.html Elections], ''[[TIME Magazine]]'', February 23, 1925</ref> creating an environment to centralization of power in the hands of the Serbs in general and Serbian politicians in particular.<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,720153,00.html The Opposition], ''[[TIME Magazine]]'', April 6, 1925</ref>
{{Main article|Chetnik war crimes in World War II|Homogenous Serbia|Chetniks}}
<!-- [[Homogenous Serbia]] redirects here -->
[[File:Serbia moljevic1941 en.png|thumb|upright=1.15|left|Moljević's "[[Homogenous Serbia]]", 1941.]]
During [[World War II]], the Serbian royalist [[Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland]] which was headed by General [[Draža Mihailović]] attempted to define its vision of a postwar future. One of its intellectuals was the Bosnian Serb nationalist [[Stevan Moljević]] who, in 1941, proposed in a paper which was titled "[[Homogenous Serbia]]" that an even larger Greater Serbia should be created, incorporating not only Bosnia and much of Croatia but also chunks of [[Romania]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Albania]] and Hungary in areas where Serbs don't represent a significant minority. In the territories which were under their military control, the Chetniks waged [[ethnic cleansing]] in a [[Chetnik war crimes in World War II#Genocide of Muslims and Croats| genocidal campaign]]{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=747}}<ref>{{cite book|last=Redžić|first=Enver|title=Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War|year=2005|publisher=Tylor and Francis|location=New York|isbn=978-0714656250|page=155|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pVCx3jerQmYC}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Hoare |first1=Marko Attila |title=Genocide and Resistance in Hitler's Bosnia: The Partisans and the Chetniks, 1941-1943 |date=2006 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19726-380-8 |page=386}}</ref> against ethnic [[Croats]] and [[Bosniaks|Bosnian Muslims]].<ref name=malcolm>{{cite book |last=Malcolm | first=Noel | title=Bosnia: A Short History |publisher=[[New York University Press]] |year=1996 |page=188 |isbn=0-8147-5561-5}}</ref><ref name=lampe>{{cite book |last=Lampe |first=John R. |title=Yugoslavia as History |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2000 |pages=206, 209, 210 |isbn=0-521-77401-2}}</ref><ref name=glenny>{{cite book |last=Glenny |first=Misha |title=The Balkans: Nationalism, War & the Great Powers, 1804–1999 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] |year=2001 |pages=494–495 |isbn=0-14-023377-6}}</ref>


{{blockquote|The Serbs today have a primary and basic duty – to create and organize a homogeneous Serbia which must consist of the entire ethnic territory on which the Serbs live.<ref>{{cite web |author=Danijela Nadj |url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm |title=Stevan Moljevic, Homogeneous Serbia (1941) |publisher=Hic.hr |access-date=2010-08-04 |archive-date=2012-02-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205182024/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>|[[Stevan Moljević]], ''[[Homogenous Serbia]]''}}
=== Chetniks Greater Serbian project ===
{{Main|Chetniks}}
[[Image:Homogena Srbija.gif|thumb|left|A 1941 [[Chetnik]] conception based on a Chetnik leaflet entitled "''Our Way''" from the archives of the Institute of Military History in Belgrade.<ref name="Tomasevich">{{cite book |title=War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: The Chetniks |last=Tomasevich |first=Jozo |year=2001 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn=0804708576 |page=168}}</ref>]]
[[File:Drazas Instrukcije.JPG|thumb|Draža Mihajlović's infamous ''"Instrukcije"'' ("Instructions") of 1941, ordering the [[ethnic cleansing]] of [[Bosniaks]], [[Croats]], and others.]]
During the [[Second World War]], the largely Serbian royalist [[Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland]] headed by General [[Draža Mihailović]] attempted to define its vision of a postwar future. One of its intellectuals was the Bosnian Serb nationalist [[Stevan Moljević]] who, in 1941, proposed in a paper entitled "[[Homogeneous Serbia]]" that an even larger Greater Serbia should be created, incorporating not only Bosnia and much of Croatia but also chunks of [[Romania]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Albania]] and [[Hungary]] in areas where Serbians don`t represent even a significant minority. In the territories under their military control, chetniks applied policy of [[ethnic cleansing]] against ethnic [[Croats]] and [[Bosniaks]].<ref name=malcolm>{{cite book |last=Malcolm | first=Noel | title=Bosnia: A Short History |publisher=[[New York University Press]] |year=1996 |page=188 |isbn=0814755615}}</ref><ref name=lampe>{{cite book |last=Lampe |first=John R. |title=Yugoslavia as History |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2000 |pages=206, 209, 210 |isbn=0521774012}}</ref><ref name=glenny>{{cite book |last=Glenny |first=Misha |title=The Balkans: Nationalism, War & the Great Powers, 1804-1999 |publisher=[[Penguin Books]] |year=2001 |pages=494–495 |isbn=0140233776}}</ref>


It was a point of discussion at a Chetnik congress which was held in the village of [[Ba, Serbia|Ba]] in central Serbia in January 1944; however, Moljević's ideas were never put into practice due to the Chetniks' defeat by [[Josip Broz Tito]]'s [[Partisans (Yugoslavia)|Partisans]] (initially a movement predominantly composed of Serbs which became more multi-ethnic by this time{{sfn|Pinson|1996|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Yl3TAkJmztYC&pg=PA143 143–144]}}) and it is difficult to assess how influential they were, due to the lack of records from the Ba congress. Nonetheless, Moljević's core idea—that Serbia is defined by the pattern of Serb settlement, irrespective of existing national borders—was to remain an underlying theme of the Greater Serbian ideal.
{{cquote2|The Serbs today have a primary and basic duty - to create and organize a homogeneous Serbia which must consist of the entire ethnic territory on which the Serbs live.<ref>{{cite web|author=Danijela Nadj|url=http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm |title=Stevan Moljevic, Homogeneous Serbia (1941) |publisher=Hic.hr |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>|[[Stevan Moljević]], ''[[Homogeneous Serbia]]''}}


==Role in the dissolution of Yugoslavia==
It is alleged to have been a significant point of discussion at a Chetnik congress held in village [[Ba, Serbia|Ba]] in central Serbia in January 1944. However, Moljević's ideas were never put into practice due to the Chetniks' defeat by [[Tito]]'s [[Partisans (Yugoslavia)|Partisans]] (also predominantly Serb [[resistance movement]]) and it is difficult to assess how influential they were, due to the lack of records from the Ba congress. Nonetheless, Moljević's core idea—that Serbia is defined by the pattern of Serbian settlement, irrespective of existing national borders—was to remain an underlying theme of the Greater Serbian ideal. Also: Moljević's excursus into cartography has become a standard reference tool in modern Serbian nationalist repertory, ranging from a familiar image of Greater Serbia map frequently appearing in the mass media to the programme of the Serbian Radical Party.
{{Coatrack section|date=June 2020}}


===SANU Memorandum===
== Role in the dissolution of Yugoslavia ==
{{Main article|Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts}}
=== SANU Memorandum ===
[[Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts]] (1986) was the single most important document to set into motion the pan-Serbian movement of the late 1980s which led to [[Slobodan Milošević]]'s rise to power and the subsequent Yugoslav wars. The authors of the Memorandum included the most influential Serbian intellectuals, among them: [[Dobrica Ćosić]], [[Pavle Ivić]], [[Antonije Isaković]], [[Dušan Kanazir]], [[Mihailo Marković]], [[Miloš Macura]], [[Dejan Medaković]], [[Miroslav Pantić]], [[Nikola Pantić]], [[Ljubiša Rakić]], [[Radovan Samardžić]], [[Miomir Vukobratovic|Miomir Vukobratović]], [[Vasilije Krestić]], [[Ivan Maksimović]], [[Kosta Mihailović]], [[Stojan Čelić]] and [[Nikola Čobelić]]. Philosopher Christopher Bennett characterized the memorandum as "an elaborate, if crude, conspiracy theory."<ref name=bennett>{{cite book |title=Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences |last=Bennett |first=Christopher |year=1995 |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers |isbn=1-85065-232-5}}</ref>{{Rp|81}} The memorandum claimed systematic discrimination against Serbs and Serbia culminating with the allegation that the Serbs of [[Kosovo and Metohija]] were being subjected to genocide. According to Bennett, despite most of these claims being obviously absurd, the memorandum was merely one of several similar polemics published at the time.<ref name=bennett/>{{Rp|81}}
[[Image:Breakup of Yugoslavia.gif|thumb|desno|[[Dissolution of Yugoslavia]] (1991-2008)]]
{{Main|Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts}}


The Memorandum's defenders claim that far from calling for a breakup of Yugoslavia on Greater Serbian lines, the document was in favor of Yugoslavia. Its support for Yugoslavia was however conditional on fundamental changes to end what the Memorandum argued was the discrimination against Serbia which was inbuilt into the Yugoslav constitution. The chief of these changes was abolition of the autonomy of [[Kosovo]] and [[Vojvodina]]. According to Norman Cigar, because the changes were unlikely to be accepted passively, the implementation of the Memorandum's program would only be possible by force.<ref>{{cite book |title=Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of "Ethnic Cleansing" |last=Cigar |first=Norman |year=1995 |publisher=Texas A&M University Press |isbn=0-89096-638-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9790890966388 }}</ref>{{Rp|24}}
The modern elaboration of Serbs' grievances and allegation of inequality in Yugoslavia was to be developed in the [[Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts]] (1986), which was the single most important document to set into motion the pan-Serbian movement of the late 1980s which led to [[Slobodan Milošević]]'s rise to power and the subsequent Yugoslav wars. The authors of the Memorandum included the most influential Serbian intellectuals, among them: [[Pavle Ivić]], [[Antonije Isaković]], [[Dušan Kanazir]], [[Mihailo Marković]], [[Miloš Macura]], [[Dejan Medaković]], [[Miroslav Pantić]], [[Nikola Pantić]], [[Ljubiša Rakić]], [[Radovan Samardžić]], [[Miomir Vukobratovic|Miomir Vukobratović]], [[Vasilije Krestić]], [[Ivan Maksimović]], [[Kosta Mihailović]], [[Stojan Čelić]] and [[Nikola Čobelić]]. Christopher Bennett, author of "''Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences''", characterized the memorandum as "an elaborate, if crude, conspiracy theory."<ref name=bennett>{{cite book |title=Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences |last=Bennett |first=Christopher |year=1995 |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers |isbn=1850652325}}</ref>{{Rp|81}} The memorandum alleged systematic discrimination against Serbs and Serbia culminating with the allegation that the Serbs of [[Kosovo|Kosovo and Metohija]] were being subjected to genocide. According to Bennett, despite most of these claims being obviously absurd, the memorandum was merely one of several similar polemics published at the time.<ref name=bennett/>{{Rp|81}}


===Milošević's rise to power===
The Memorandum's central theses are:
{{Main article|Anti-bureaucratic revolution|Rally of Truth|Role of the media in the Yugoslav wars}}
* Yugoslavia is a Croatian-Slovene hegemony, in order to reduce the Serbs to a smaller representative group, or "power-sharing".
* Serbs are, in Yugoslavia, oppressed as a nation. This oppression is especially brutal in Serbian Autonomous Province of Kossovo-Metochia, and in [[Croatia]], where their status is "the worst ever as far as recorded history goes".
* [[Serbia]] is economically exploited, being subjected to the political-economical mechanisms that drain much of her wealth and redistribute it to [[Slovenia]], Croatia and Kossovo-Metochia.
* borders between Yugoslav republics are arbitrary, drawn by dominant Croatian and Slovene communists (motivated, supposedly, by anti-Serbian animus) and their Serbian political lapdogs.


With the rise to power of Milošević the Memorandum's discourse became mainstream in Serbia. According to Bennett, Milošević used a [[Role of the media in the Yugoslav wars|rigid control of the media]] to organize a propaganda campaign in which the Serbs were the victims and stressed the need to readjust Yugoslavia due to the alleged bias against Serbia. This was then followed by Milošević's [[anti-bureaucratic revolution]] in which the provincial governments of Vojvodina and Kosovo and the Republican government of [[Montenegro]], were overthrown giving Milošević the dominating position of four votes out of eight in Yugoslavia's collective presidency. Milošević had achieved such a dominant position for Serbia because, according to Bennett, the old communist authorities had failed to stand up to him. During August 1988, supporters of the Anti-Bureaucratic Revolution were reported to have shouted Greater Serbia themed chants of "Montenegro is Serbia!"{{sfn|Ramet|2006|pp=351}}
The Memorandum's defenders claims go as follows: far from calling for a breakup of Yugoslavia on Greater Serbian lines claimed to be in favor of Yugoslavia. Its support for Yugoslavia was however conditional on fundamental changes to end what the Memorandum argued was the discrimination against Serbia which was inbuilt into the Yugoslav constitution. The chief of these changes was abolition of the autonomy of [[Kosovo]] and [[Vojvodina]]. According to Norman Cigar, because the changes were unlikely to be accepted passively, the implementation of the Memorandum's program would only be possible by force.<ref>{{cite book |title=Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of "Ethnic Cleansing" |last=Cigar |first=Norman |year=1995 |publisher=Texas A&M University Press |isbn=0890966389}}</ref>{{Rp|24}}


Croatia and Slovenia denounced the demands by Milošević for a more centralized system of government in Yugoslavia and they began to demand that Yugoslavia be made a full multi-party confederal state.{{sfn|Ramet|2006|pp=355}} Milošević claimed that he opposed a confederal system but also declared that should a confederal system be created, the external borders of Serbia would be an "open question", insinuating that his government would pursue creating a Greater Serbia if Yugoslavia was decentralized.{{sfn|Ramet|2006|pp=359}} Milosevic stated: "These are the questions of borders, essential state questions. The borders, as you know, are always dictated by the strong, never by weak ones."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/09/01/magazine/carving-out-a-greater-serbia.html|title=Carving Out a Greater Serbia|work=Stephen Engelberg|publisher=nytimes|date=1 September 1991|access-date=8 February 2021}}</ref>
=== Milošević's rise to power ===
[[IMAGE:Greater Serbia claims early 93.png|thumb|Milošević's vision of Greater Serbia in 1993.]]
{{Main|Anti-bureaucratic revolution|Role of the media in the Yugoslav wars}}


[[File:Breakup of Yugoslavia.gif|thumb|upright=1.15|right|[[Dissolution of Yugoslavia]] (1991–2008)]]
With the rise to power of Milošević the Memorandum's discourse became mainstream in Serbia. According to Bennett, Milošević used a [[Role of the media in the Yugoslav wars|rigid control of the media]] to organize a propaganda campaign in which the Serbs were the victims and stressed the need to readjust Yugoslavia due to the alleged bias against Serbia. This was then followed by Milošević's [[anti-bureaucratic revolution]] in which the provincial governments of [[Vojvodina]] and [[Kosovo]] along with the Republican government of [[Montenegro]], were overthrown giving Milošević the dominating position of four votes out of eight in Yugoslavia's collective presidency. Milošević had achieved such a dominant position for Serbia because, according to Bennett, the old communist authorities had failed to stand up to him. This changed first in 1990 when free elections brought opposition parties to power in Croatia and Slovenia.<ref name=bennett/>
By this point several opposition parties in Serbia were openly calling for a Greater Serbia, rejecting the then existing boundaries of the Republics as the artificial creation of Tito's partisans. These included [[Vojislav Šešelj|Šešelj]]'s [[Serbian Radical Party]], claiming that the recent changes had rectified most of the anti-Serb bias that the Memorandum had alleged. Milošević supported the groups calling for a Greater Serbia, insisting on the demand for "all Serbs in one state". The [[Socialist Party of Serbia]] appeared to be defenders of the Serb people in Yugoslavia. Serbian president [[Slobodan Milošević]], who was also the leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia, repeatedly stated that all Serbs should enjoy the right to be included in Serbia.<ref name="UN">{{cite web|url=http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/IV.htm |title=Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780 |last=Bassiouni |first=Cherif |date=28 December 1994 |publisher=United Nations |access-date=10 May 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120504142243/http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/IV.htm |archive-date=4 May 2012 }}</ref> Opponents and critics of Milošević claimed that "Yugoslavia could be that one state but the threat was that, should Yugoslavia break up, then Serbia under Milošević would carve out a Greater Serbia".<ref name=gow>{{cite book |title=Triumph of the Lack of Will: International Diplomacy and the Yugoslav War |last=Gow |first=James |year=1997 |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers |isbn=1-85065-208-2}}</ref>{{Rp|19}}
[[Image:Greater Serbia in Yugoslavia.png|thumb|right|200px|[[Virovitica-Karlovac-Karlobag line|Greater Serbian border]] proposed by [[Serbian Radical Party]] during the Yugoslav Wars.<ref name="Šešelj ICTY Case information sheet">[http://www.un.org/icty/cases-e/cis/seselj/cis-seselj.pdf Šešelj ICTY Case information sheet]{{dead link|date=August 2010}}</ref>]]
By this point several opposition parties in Serbia were openly calling for a Greater Serbia, rejecting the then existing boundaries of the Republics as the artificial creation of Tito's partisans. These included [[Šešelj]]'s [[Serbian Radical Party]], claiming that the recent changes had rectified most of the anti-Serb bias that the Memorandum had alleged. Milošević supported the groups calling for a Greater Serbia, insisting on the demand for "all Serbs in one state". The [[Socialist Party of Serbia]] appeared to be defenders of the Serb people in Yugoslavia. Serbian president [[Slobodan Milošević]], who was also the leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia, repeatedly stated that all Serbs should enjoy the right to be included in Serbia.<ref name="UN"/> Opponents and critics of Milošević claimed that "Yugoslavia could be that one state but the threat was that, should Yugoslavia break up, then Serbia under Milošević would carve out a Greater Serbia".<ref name=gow>{{cite book |title=Triumph of the Lack of Will: International Diplomacy and the Yugoslav War |last=Gow |first=James |year=1997 |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers |isbn=1850652082}}</ref>{{Rp|19}}


In 1990, power had seeped away from the federal government to the republics and were deadlocked over the future of Yugoslavia with the Slovene and Croatian republics seeking a confederacy and Serbia a stronger federation. Gow states, "it was the behavior of Serbia that added to the Croatian and Slovene Republic's belief that no accommodation was possible with the Serbian Republic's leadership". The last straw was on 15 May 1991 when the outgoing Serb president of the collective presidency along with the Serb satellites on the presidency blocked the succession of the Croatian representative [[Stjepan Mesić]] as president. According to Gow, from this point on Yugoslavia ''[[de facto]]'' "ceased to function".<ref name=gow/>{{Rp|20}}
Major changes took place in Yugoslavia in 1990 when free elections brought opposition parties to power in Croatia and Slovenia.<ref name=bennett/> In 1990, power had seeped away from the federal government to the republics and were deadlocked over the future of Yugoslavia with the Slovene and Croatian republics seeking a confederacy and Serbia a stronger federation. Gow states, "it was the behavior of Serbia that added to the Croatian and Slovene Republic's belief that no accommodation was possible with the Serbian Republic's leadership". The last straw was on 15 May 1991 when the outgoing Serb president of the collective presidency along with the Serb satellites on the presidency blocked the succession of the Croatian representative [[Stjepan Mesić]] as president. According to Gow, from this point on Yugoslavia ''[[de facto]]'' "ceased to function".<ref name=gow/>{{Rp|20}}


===Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line===
=== Yugoslav wars ===
<!-- [[Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line]] redirects here -->
{{Main|Serbia in the Yugoslav Wars|Bosnian Genocide|Joint Criminal Enterprise}}
[[File:Serbia in the Yugoslav Wars.png|thumb|Territories of the [[Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] and the [[Republic of Croatia]] controlled by Serb forces [[1992]]-[[1995]].]]


The '''Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line''' ({{langx|sr|Вировитица–Карловац–Карлобаг линија}} / ''Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag linija'') is a hypothetical boundary that describes the western extent of an irredentist nationalist Serbian state.<ref name="seselj-bio">{{cite web | url = http://www.vseselj.rs/index.php?a=107 | language = sr| work = Biografija :: Pojmovnik | title = Granice (srpske) | publisher = Vojislav Šešelj official website |date=April 1992 | quote = Srpske granice dopiru do Karlobaga, Ogulina, Karlovca, Virovitice. | access-date = 2012-12-21}}</ref> It defines everything east of this line, [[Karlobag]]–[[Ogulin]]–[[Karlovac]]–[[Virovitica]], as a part of [[Serbia]], while the west of it would be within [[Slovenia]], and all which might remain of [[Croatia]]. Such a boundary would give the majority of the territory of the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia]] to the [[Serbs]].
{{cquote2|Milosevic believes he now has the historic opportunity to, once and for all, settle accounts with the Croats and do what Serbian politicians after World War I did not - rally all Serbs in one Serbian state.<ref name="UN"/>|Belgrade newspaper [[Borba (newspaper)|Borba]], August 1991.}}


This line was frequently referenced by Serbian politician [[Vojislav Šešelj]].<ref name="un-seselj">{{cite web | publisher = ICTY | url = http://www.icty.org/x/cases/seselj/cis/en/cis_seselj_en.pdf | work = (IT-03-67) Vojislav Šešelj trial | title = Case information sheet | quote = He defined the so-called Karlobag-Ogulin-Karlovac-Virovitica line as the western border of this new Serbian state which he referred to as "Greater Serbia" and which included Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia and considerable parts of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. | access-date = 2012-12-21}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140407095641/http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=28829&lang=en | archive-date = 2014-04-07 | url = http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=28829&lang=en | title = Footnotes | first = Miroslav | last = Međimorec | journal = National Security and the Future | issn = 1332-4454 | publisher = St. George Association / Udruga sv. Jurja | location = Zagreb, Croatia | volume = 3 | number = 3–4 |date=September 2002 | quote = 8. "The Virovitica-Karlovac-Karlobag line" – the amputation line which was intended to come into being by the imposed Yugoslav king Alexander after the assassination of Croatian national tribune Stjepan Radić in 1928. The remains of thus amputated Croatia "would be seen from the Zagreb Cathedral's tower". That line is also mentioned in Četniks' plans during WW2 (Moljević, Dražža Mihajlović), the line mentioned by Serb radical politicians (Šešelj) and by the JNA military strategists as the western border of "Greater Serbia". | access-date = 2012-12-21}} [http://www.nsf-journal.hr/issues/v3_n3-4/pdf/11-footnotes.pdf Alt URL]</ref>
During the [[Yugoslav wars]] of the 1990s, the concept of a Greater Serbia was widely seen outside of Serbia as the motivating force for the military campaigns undertaken to form and sustain Serbian states on the territories of the breakaway Yugoslav republics of Croatia (the [[Republic of Serbian Krajina]]) and Bosnia and Herzegovina (the [[Republika Srpska]]).<ref name="ReferenceA">Decision of the ICTY Appeals Chamber; 18 April 2002; Reasons for the Decision on Prosecution Interlocutory Appeal from Refusal to Order Joinder; Paragraph 8</ref> From the Serb point of view, the objective of this policy was to assure Serbs' rights by ensuring that they could never be subjected to potentially hostile rule, particularly by their historic Croatian enemies (cf. [[Ustaše]]).{{Citation needed|date=February 2010}}


A greater Serbian state was supported for irredentist as well as economical reasons, as it would give Serbia a large coastline, heavy industries, agricultural farmland, natural resources and all of the crude oil (mostly found in the [[Pannonian Plain]], and particularly in the [[Socialist Republic of Croatia]]). There were various Serbian politicians associated with [[Slobodan Milošević]] in the early 1990s who publicly espoused such views: [[Mihalj Kertes]], [[Milan Babić]], [[Milan Martić]], [[Vojislav Šešelj]], [[Stevan Mirković]].<ref>{{cite news | url = http://www.scc.rutgers.edu/serbian_digest/3/t3-1.htm | language = sr | newspaper = [[Vreme]] New Digest Agency | title = Converting the Army | date = 1991-10-14 | issue = 3 | quote = The projected future frontiers of the "Great Serbia" are derived from the recent Army offensives and extrapolated from the public statements of Serbian politicians known to be "the mouthpiece of Milosevic". [...] The line Karlovac–Virovitica incidentally covers the only oilfields in Yugoslavia. The entire Slavonia represents probably the best agricultural soil in Europe. | access-date = 2012-12-21}}</ref>
The [[war crimes]] charges against [[Milošević]] are based on the allegation that he sought the establishment of a "Greater Serbia". Prosecutors at the Hague argued that "the indictments were all part of a common scheme, strategy or plan on the part of the accused [Milošević] to create a 'Greater Serbia', a centralized [[Serbia]]n state encompassing the [[Serb]]-populated areas of [[Croatia]] and [[Bosnia]] and all of [[Kosovo]], and that this plan was to be achieved by [[Deportation|forcibly removing]] non-Serbs from large geographical areas through the commission of the [[crime]]s charged in the indictments. Although the events in Kosovo were separated from those in Croatia and Bosnia by more than three years, they were no more than a continuation of that plan, and they could only be understood completely by reference to what had happened in Croatia and Bosnia."<ref name="ReferenceA"/>


In his speeches and books, Šešelj claimed that all of the population of these areas are in fact ethnic Serbs, of Orthodox, Roman Catholic or Muslim faith. However, outside of Šešelj's [[Serbian Radical Party]], the line as such was never promoted in recent Serbian political life.
The Hague Trial Chamber found that the strategic plan of the Bosnian Serb leadership consisted of "a plan to link Serb-populated areas in BiH together, to gain control over these areas and to create a separate Bosnian Serb state, from which most non-Serbs would be permanently removed".<ref name="ICTY: Radoslav Brđanin judgement">{{cite web|title=Prosecutor v. Radoslav Brđanin - Judgement| publisher = [[United Nations]] [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] | date = 2007-04-03 |url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/brdanin/acjug/en/brd-aj070403-e.pdf| accessdate = 2009-11-03}}</ref> It also found that media in certain areas focused only on [[Serbian Democratic Party|SDS]] policy and reports from [[Belgrade]] became more prominent, including the presentation of extremist views and promotion of the concept of a Greater Serbia, just as in other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina the concept of a [[Greater Croatia]] was openly advocated.<ref name="ICTY: Dusko Tadic">{{cite web| title=Prosecutor v. Duško Tadić - Judgement| publisher = [[United Nations]] [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] | date = 1997-07-14| url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/tadic/tjug/en/tad-sj970714e.pdf| accessdate = 2009-11-03}}</ref>


===Yugoslav wars===
The concept of a Greater Serbia has been widely criticised by other nations in the former Yugoslavia as well as by foreign observers. The two principal objections have been:
{{Main article|Serbia in the Yugoslav Wars}}
[[File:Serbs in Croatia, Bosnia, Montenegro and Serbia, 1981.png|thumb|upright=1.15|The distribution of [[Serbs]] and [[Montenegrins]] in [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]] in 1981.]]
[[File:Serbia in the Yugoslav Wars.png|thumb|upright=1.15|Territories of the [[Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] and the [[Croatia|Republic of Croatia]] controlled by Serb forces 1992–1995.]]


{{blockquote|Milošević believes he now has the historic opportunity to, once and for all, settle accounts with the Croats and do what Serbian politicians after World War I did not – rally all Serbs in one Serbian state.<ref name="UN"/>|Belgrade newspaper [[Borba (newspaper)|Borba]], August 1991.}}
* Questionable historical justifications for claims to territory; for instance, during the [[Croatian War of Independence]], [[Dubrovnik]] and other parts of [[Dalmatia]] were claimed as a historically Serbian territory — claims which were opposed by Croatian authorities, and by high-profile international governments.
[[Image:Srebrenica massacre memorial gravestones 2009 1.jpg|thumb|[[Srebrenica Genocide Memorial]]]]
* The coercive nature of creating a Greater Serbian state against the will of other nations; before the wars, the peoples of Yugoslavia were highly intermingled and it was physically impossible to create [[nation state|ethnic states]] without taking in large numbers of other ethnic groups against their will. An answer to this was the widespread use of [[ethnic cleansing]] to ensure that mono-ethnic territories could be established without opposition from potentially disloyal minority groups. A converse argument is used against the upgrading the status of Croatia and of Bosnia and Herzegovina from republics to independent states—taking in large numbers of other ethnic groups against their will in the process.


The [[war crimes]] charges against Milošević are based on the allegation that he sought the establishment of a "Greater Serbia". Prosecutors at the Hague argued that "the indictments were all part of a common scheme, strategy or plan on the part of the accused [Milošević] to create a 'Greater Serbia', a centralized Serbian state encompassing the Serb-populated areas of [[Croatia]] and Bosnia and all of Kosovo, and that this plan was to be achieved by [[Deportation|forcibly removing]] non-Serbs from large geographical areas through the commission of the crimes charged in the indictments. Although the events in Kosovo were separated from those in Croatia and Bosnia by more than three years, they were no more than a continuation of that plan, and they could only be understood completely by reference to what had happened in Croatia and Bosnia."<ref name="ReferenceA">Decision of the ICTY Appeals Chamber; 18 April 2002; Reasons for the Decision on Prosecution Interlocutory Appeal from Refusal to Order Joinder; Paragraph 8</ref>
[[Vuk Draskovic]], leader of the [[Serbian Renewal Movement]], called for the creation of a Greater Serbia which would include Serbia, Kosovo, Vojvodina, Macedonia and Montenegro, as well as regions within Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia with high concentrations of Serbs.<ref name="UN"/> [[Jovan Marjanovic]] of the [[Serbian Renewal Movement]] asked that "the [[Yugoslav Army]] must come into Croatia and occupy the line [[Benkovac]]-[[Karlovac]]-[[Pakrac]]-[[Baranya (region)|Baranja]]".<ref>International Centre Against Censorship. "Forging War: The Media in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina". ''International Centre Against Censorship, Article 19''. Avon, United Kingdom: Bath Press, May 1994. P79.</ref> About 160,000 [[Croats]] were expelled from territories Serbian forces sought to control.<ref name="post-gazette.com">{{cite news|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/04242/368273.stm |title=Atrocities in Yugoslavia unraveled much later |publisher=Post-gazette.com |date=2004-08-29 |accessdate=2010-08-04 | first=Joe | last=Smydo}}</ref>


The Hague Trial Chamber found that the strategic plan of the Bosnian Serb leadership consisted of "a plan to link Serb-populated areas in BiH together, to gain control over these areas and to create a separate Bosnian Serb state, from which most non-Serbs would be permanently removed".<ref name="ICTY: Radoslav Brđanin judgement">{{cite web|title=Prosecutor v. Radoslav Brđanin – Judgement| publisher = [[United Nations]] [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] | date = 2007-04-03 |url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/brdanin/acjug/en/brd-aj070403-e.pdf| access-date = 2009-11-03}}</ref> It also found that media in certain areas focused only on [[Serb Democratic Party (Bosnia and Herzegovina)|Serb Democratic Party]] policy and reports from [[Belgrade]] became more prominent, including the presentation of extremist views and promotion of the concept of a Greater Serbia, just as in other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina the concept of a [[Greater Croatia]] was openly advocated.<ref name="ICTY: Dusko Tadic">{{cite web| title=Prosecutor v. Duško Tadić – Judgement| publisher = [[United Nations]] [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] | date = 1997-07-14| url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/tadic/tjug/en/tad-sj970714e.pdf| access-date = 2009-11-03}}</ref>
Much of the fighting in the [[Yugoslav Wars]] of the 1990s was the result of an attempt to keep Serbs unified. [[Mihajlo Markovic]], the Vice President of the Main Committee of [[Serbia's Socialist Party]], rejected any solution that would make Serbs outside Serbia a minority. He proposed establishing a federation consisting of Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and Serbs residing in the Serbian Autonomous Region of [[Krajina]], [[Slavonia]], [[Baranya (region)|Baranja]], and [[Srem]].<ref name="UN"/>


[[Vuk Drašković]], leader of the [[Serbian Renewal Movement]], called for the creation of a Greater Serbia which would include Serbia, Kosovo, Vojvodina, Macedonia and Montenegro, as well as regions within Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia with high concentrations of Serbs.<ref name="UN"/> About 160,000 Croats were expelled from territories Serbian forces sought to control.<ref name="post-gazette.com">{{cite news|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/04242/368273.stm |title=Atrocities in Yugoslavia unraveled much later |publisher=Post-gazette.com |date=2004-08-29 |access-date=2010-08-04 | first=Joe | last=Smydo}}</ref>
=== Failure of the Greater Serbian project ===
{{Main|International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia}}


Much of the fighting in the [[Yugoslav Wars]] of the 1990s was the result of an attempt to keep Serbs unified. [[Mihailo Marković]], the Vice President of the Main Committee of [[Serbia's Socialist Party]], rejected any solution that would make Serbs outside Serbia a minority. He proposed establishing a federation consisting of Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and Serbs residing in the Serbian Autonomous Region of [[Krajina]], [[Slavonia]], [[Baranya (region)|Baranja]], and [[Srem]].<ref name="UN"/>
The military defeat of the [[Republic of Serb Krajina]], the creation of the [[Republika Srpska]] within a sovereign Bosnia-Hercegovina, the [[UNMIK|UN Administration of Kosovo]], the exodus of Serbs from large areas of Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo and the indictment of some Serbian leaders for [[war crimes]] have greatly discredited the Greater Serbian ideal in Serbia as well as abroad. [[Western world|Western]] countries claim that atrocities of the Yugoslav Wars have prompted them to take a much stronger stance against the Greater Serbian goal.


===Later developments ===
{{cquote2|So I say: if a Greater Serbia should be held by committing crime, I would never accept it; may Greater Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime - no. If it were necessary to hold only a small Serbia by crime, I would not accept it. May small Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime - no. And if there is only one Serb, and if I am that last Serb, to hold on by crime - I do not accept. May we disappear, but disappear as humans, because then we will not disappear, we will be alive in the hands of the living God.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dverisrpske.com/tekst/230 |title=Interview with Patriarch Pavle (serbian) |publisher=Dverisrpske.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>|[[Patriarch Pavle of Serbia]]}}
{{Main article|International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia}}
[[File:Izbori 2012 - plakati Vojislav Šešelj (1).JPG|thumb|[[Vojislav Šešelj]], president of the [[Serbian Radical Party]], is one of the staunchest advocates of Greater Serbia.]]


{{blockquote|So I say: if a Greater Serbia should be held by committing crime, I would never accept it; may Greater Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime – no. If it were necessary to hold only a small Serbia by crime, I would not accept it. May small Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime – no. And if there is only one Serb, and if I am that last Serb, to hold on by crime – I do not accept. May we disappear, but disappear as humans, because then we will not disappear, we will be alive in the hands of the living God.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dverisrpske.com/tekst/230 |title=Interview with Patriarch Pavle (Serbian) |publisher=Dverisrpske.com |access-date=2010-08-04}}</ref>|[[Serbian Patriarch Pavle]]}}
[[Slobodan Milošević]] and many other Serb leaders were charged by the [[International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY) with crimes against humanity including [[murder]], forcible [[population transfer]], [[deportation]] and "[[persecution]] on political, racial or religious grounds". Tribunal prosecutor's office has accused Milosevic of "the gravest [[Human rights violations|violations of human rights]] in Europe since the [[Second World War]]."<ref name="post-gazette.com"/> Milosevic died in prison before sentencing.


The [[International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY) accused [[Slobodan Milošević]] and other Serb leaders of committing crimes against humanity which included murder, forcible [[population transfer]], [[deportation]] and "[[persecution]] on political, racial or religious grounds." Tribunal prosecutor's office has accused Milosevic of "the gravest [[Human rights violations|violations of human rights]] in Europe since the Second World War and genocide."<ref name="post-gazette.com"/>
However, the idea of a Greater Serbia is still seen by many Croats, Bosnian Muslims, and Albanians as a barrier to good relations and unity between Serbs and other neighbouring peoples.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=kBjrJyen4FEC&pg=PA106&dq=%22Great+Serbia%22#v=onepage&q=%22Great%20Serbia%22&f=false |title=David Bruce MacDonald, Balkan holocausts?: Serbian and Croatian victim-centred propaganda |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-04}}</ref>


Serbian historian [[Sima Ćirković]] stated that grumblings about Greater Serbia and pointing fingers at Garašanin's Načertanije and the "Memorandum" is not helping to solve the existing problems and that it is an abuse of history.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Ćirković|first=Sima|title=Živeti sa istorijom|publisher=Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji|year=2020|location=Belgrade|pages=236}}</ref>
==See also==
*[[Arbitration Commission of the Peace Conference on the former Yugoslavia]]
* [[Persecution of Serbs]]
* [[Serbian war crimes]]
* [[Serbianisation]]


Serbian academic Čedomir Popov considers that the allegations of "Greater Serbian intentions" are often used for politically anti-Serbian interests and that they are factually incorrect. Popov stated that throughout the Serbian history there never was nor ever will be a Greater Serbia.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Mojović|first=Dragan|date=2007|title=Velike Srbije nikada nije bilo|url=|journal=NIN|volume=|pages=82, 83|via=}}</ref>
==Notes and references==
'''Notes:'''


In 2008, [[Aleksandar Vučić]], a former member of the [[Serbian Radical Party]], which advocated the creation of a Greater Serbia, stated that Šešelj's vision of Greater Serbian was unrealistic and that idea of Greater Serbia was unrealistic at the moment because of balance of power held by the [[great power]]s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Vučić sad nije za veliku Srbiju|url=http://www.blic.rs/Vesti/Politika/63178/Vucic-sad-nije-za-veliku-Srbiju|publisher=Blic Online|access-date=30 August 2011}}</ref>
{| class="references-small" style="margin-left:13px; line-height:150%"
|-
| style="text-align:right; vertical-align:top;"|a.&nbsp;&nbsp;
|{{note|status}}{{Kosovo-note}}
|}


==Recent events==
'''References:'''
{{Main article|Proposed secession of Republika Srpska}}
{{reflist|2}}
In 2011, there was a movement calling for the unification of [[Republika Srpska]] with [[Serbia]].
This idea is detested by [[Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] where it is seen as an act of breaking the [[Dayton Agreement]], while Serbs see it as an example of [[self-determination]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Carpenter |first=Ted Galen |date=February 2011 |title=Time to Reconsider Partition For Bosnia |work=European Affairs |publisher=European Institute |url=http://www.europeaninstitute.org/EA-February-2011/time-to-reconsider-partition-for-bosnia.html |access-date=2012-10-25 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130514052338/http://www.europeaninstitute.org/EA-February-2011/time-to-reconsider-partition-for-bosnia.html |archive-date=2013-05-14 }}</ref>


== Literature ==
=== Serbian world ===
Ever since 2020, a new term called "Serbian world" ({{langx|sr|Srpski svet|links=no}}) came to use among prominent Serbian politicians such as [[Aleksandar Vulin]]. In November 2024, while speaking in [[Banja Luka]], Vulin as a deputy prime minister of Serbia said that "process of creation of Serbian world, process of unification, had begun".<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-11-21 |title=Jutarnji list - Vulin: 'Proces stvaranja 'srpskog svijeta' je krenuo i više ga nitko ne može zaustaviti!' |url=https://www.jutarnji.hr/vijesti/svijet/vulin-proces-stvaranja-srpskog-svijeta-je-krenuo-i-vise-ga-nitko-ne-moze-zaustaviti-15524913 |access-date=2024-11-21 |website=www.jutarnji.hr |language=hr-hr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Vulin: Proces stvaranja srpskog svijeta i ujedinjenja Srba je započeo |url=https://www.tportal.hr/vijesti/clanak/vulin-proces-stvaranja-srpskog-svijeta-i-ujedinjenja-srba-je-zapoceo-20241121 |access-date=2024-11-21 |website=tportal.hr}}</ref> Several regional media outlets and political commentators interpreted this term as a replacement for the earlier concept of "Greater Serbia".<ref>{{Cite web|last=Agić|first=Jasmin|title=Vulinov 'srpski svet': Pola Bosne i cijela Crna Gora|url=https://balkans.aljazeera.net/teme/2021/5/5/vulinov-srpski-svet-pola-bosne-i-cijela-crna-gora|access-date=2021-06-14|website=balkans.aljazeera.net|language=bs}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Svi 'srpski svetovi' Aleksandra Vulina|url=https://www.slobodnaevropa.org/a/svi-vulinovi-srpski-svetovi-/31247926.html|access-date=2021-06-14|website=Radio Slobodna Evropa|date=10 May 2021 |language=sh|last1=Martinović |first1=Iva }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=La Grande Serbie et tous les mondes serbes d'Aleksandar Vulin|url=https://www.courrierdesbalkans.fr/La-Grande-Serbie-et-tous-les-mondes-serbes-d-Aleksandar-Vulin|access-date=2021-06-14|website=Le Courrier des Balkans|language=fr}}</ref> On June 8, 2024, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić hosted the Pan-Serb Assembly in Belgrade, bringing together representatives of Serbs from across the former Yugoslavia. According to politologist Alexander Rhotert, who quotes Vulin, the main objective of the assembly was to excecute the strategic goal of Serbian world, which is creation of "political and state territory" on which all Serbs would live and which would be a somewhat smaller version of Greater Serbia.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Odgovori na srpske provokacije – DW – 27.09.2024 |url=https://www.dw.com/hr/berliner-zeitung-odgovori-na-srpske-provokacije/a-70344106 |access-date=2024-11-10 |website=dw.com |language=hr}}</ref> The assembly produced General Serb Declaration; the document asserts that [[Kosovo]] is an integral part of Serbia, and Republika Srpska is being considered a "national interest of Serbia".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Zašto se Srbija sve više naoružava? – DW – 10.11.2024 |url=https://www.dw.com/hr/za%C5%A1to-se-srbija-sve-vi%C5%A1e-naoru%C5%BEava/a-70723530 |access-date=2024-11-10 |website=dw.com |language=hr}}</ref> Prime minister of Serbia [[Miloš Vučević]] in December 2024 stated that one of the projects related to aforementioned General Serb Declaration is a construction of [[Trebinje]] airport in [[Eastern Herzegovina]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-12-01 |title=Slobodna Dalmacija - Dodik i srpski premijer Vučević: Nećemo odustati od gradnje zračne luke u Trebinju, Hrvatska je ne smije osporavati |url=https://slobodnadalmacija.hr/vijesti/regija/dodik-i-srpski-premijer-vucevic-necemo-odustati-od-gradnje-zracne-luke-u-trebinju-hrvatska-je-ne-smije-osporavati-1437072 |access-date=2024-12-01 |website=slobodnadalmacija.hr |language=hr-hr}}</ref>
* {{cite |author=Svetozar Marković |title=Serbija na istoku (Serbia in the East) |publisher=Novi Sad |year=1872}}

* Branimir Anzulovic: Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide, NYU Press, 1999.
==See also==
* Philip J. Cohen: Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History (Eastern European Studies, No 2), Texas A & M University Press, Reprint Edition, February 1997.
{{Portal|Serbia}}
* Ivo Banac: The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics, Cornell University Press, Reprint edition, 1988.
*[[Anti-Croat sentiment]]
*[[Anti-Serb sentiment]]
*[[Far-right politics in Serbia]]
*[[Greater Albania]]
*[[Greater Bosnia]]
*[[Greater Croatia]]
*[[Proposed secession of Republika Srpska]]
*[[Serbianisation]]
*[[Serbian nationalism]]
*[[Homogeneous Serbia|Homogenous Serbia]]

==References==
{{reflist|30em}}

==Literature==
* {{cite journal|last=Antić|first=Čedomir|title=Kratko slavlje u Draču|journal=[[Večernje Novosti]] |date=January 2, 2010 |url=http://www.novosti.rs/dodatni_sadrzaj/clanci.119.html:280057-Kratko-slavlje-u-Dracu |access-date=August 5, 2011|trans-title=Short celebration in Durres|language=sr}}
* {{cite book |last=Anzulovic |first=Branimir |title=Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide |year=1999 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=0-8147-0671-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/heavenlyserbiafr00anzu }}
* {{cite journal|last=Banac|first=Ivo|author-link=Ivo Banac |year=1992 |title=The Fearful Asymmetry of War: The Causes and Consequences of Yugoslavia's Demise |journal=Daedalus|volume=121|issue=2|pages=141–174|publisher=MIT Press on behalf of American Academy of Arts & Sciences |jstor=20025437}}
*{{cite book|last=Banac|first=Ivo|author-link=Ivo Banac |title=The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ggjhCQAAQBAJ|year=2015|orig-year=1988|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-1-5017-0193-1}}
* {{cite book |last=Banac |first=Ivo | author-link = Ivo Banac |year=1988 |title=Nacionalno pitanje u Jugoslaviji: porijeklo, povijest, politika|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gZJpAAAAMAAJ|publisher=Globus |isbn=9788634302370 }}
* {{cite book|last=Cohen|first=Philip J.|title=Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History|url=https://archive.org/details/serbiassecretwar0000cohe|url-access=registration|year=1996|publisher=Texas A&M University Press|isbn=978-0-89096-760-7}}
* {{cite journal|last=Manetovic|first=Edislav|title=Ilija Garasanin: Nacertanije and Nationalism|journal= The Historical Review/La Revue Historique|volume=3|date=2006|pages=137–173|url=https://epublishing.ekt.gr/en/7583/The-Historical-Review-La-Revue-Historique/7661 |doi=10.12681/hr.201|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite book|last=Popov|first=Čedomir|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-X5bRgAACAAJ|title=Velika Srbija: stvarnost i mit|date=2007|publisher=Izd. Knjižarnica Zorana Stojanovića|isbn=978-86-7543-123-7|language=en}}
* {{cite journal|last=Melichárek |first=Maroš |year=2015 |title=The role of Vuk. S. Karadžić in the history of Serbian nationalism |journal=Serbian Studies Research |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=55–74 |url= https://www.academia.edu/33285519}}
* {{cite book|editor-last=Pinson|editor-first=Mark |title=The Muslims of Bosnia-Herzegovina: Their Historic Development from the Middle Ages to the Dissolution of Yugoslavia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yl3TAkJmztYC |access-date=2 October 2013 |year=1996 |series=Harvard Middle Eastern Monographs |volume=XXVIII |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-932885-12-8}}
* {{cite book|last=Ramet|first=Sabrina P.|title=The Three Yugoslavias: State-Building and Legitimation, 1918–2005|year=2006|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington, IN|isbn=978-0-253-34656-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Tomasevich |first=Jozo |year=1975 |title=War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford |isbn=978-0-8047-0857-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yoCaAAAAIAAJ}}
* {{Cite book|last=Tomasevich|first=Jozo|title=War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941–1945 |year=2001 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn=9780804779241 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fqUSGevFe5MC}}
* {{cite book|last1=Trencsenyi|first1=Balazs|last2=Kopecek|first2=Michal|title=National Romanticism: The Formation of National Movements: Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe 1770–1945, volume II|year=2007|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dup4BgAAQBAJ|publisher=Central European University Press|location=Budapest|isbn=978-9-637-32660-8}}
* {{cite book|author=Sinisa Malesevic|title=Ideology, Legitimacy and the New State: Yugoslavia, Serbia and Croatia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mfkrBgAAQBAJ|date=11 January 2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-34176-2}}
* {{cite book|author=Charles Jelavich|title=Serbian textbooks: toward greater Serbia or Yugoslavia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BN1UNQAACAAJ|date=1983}}
* {{citation |author=Svetozar Marković |title=Serbija na istoku (Serbia in the East) |publisher=Novi Sad |year=1872}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Commonscat}}
From [[Project Rastko]] website:
From [[Project Rastko]] website:
* [http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/batakovic/batakovic-nacertanije_eng.html Ilija Garasanin's "Nacertanije": A Reasessment], including full translation of the document to English language
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20140107164026/http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/batakovic/batakovic-nacertanije_eng.html Ilija Garasanin's "Nacertanije": A Reasessment], including full translation of the document to English language
* [http://www.hic.hr/images/domovinski-rat/Memorandum-SANU.pdf Full Memorandum SANU (73 pages)] {{sr icon}}
*[http://www.hic.hr/images/domovinski-rat/Memorandum-SANU.pdf Full Memorandum SANU (73 pages)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927215841/http://www.hic.hr/images/domovinski-rat/Memorandum-SANU.pdf |date=2007-09-27 }} {{in lang|sr}}
* [http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/iii/memorandum.pdf Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Answers to Criticism]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090304012259/http://www.rastko.org.rs/istorija/iii/memorandum.pdf Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Answers to Criticism]

From ''Croatian Information Centre'' website:
From ''Croatian Information Centre'' website:
* [http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/ "Greater Serbia - from Ideology to Aggression"], book of excerpts of influential Serbians supporting the idea
*[http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/ "Greater Serbia from Ideology to Aggression"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709195206/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/ |date=2011-07-09 }}, book of excerpts of influential Serbians supporting the idea
* [http://www.hic.hr/books/blackhand/ Henri Pozzi:Black Hand Over Europe]
*[http://www.hic.hr/books/blackhand/ Henri Pozzi:Black Hand Over Europe] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629094351/http://www.hic.hr/books/blackhand/ |date=2011-06-29 }}
* [http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/sanu.htm Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts]
*[http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/sanu.htm Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629094357/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/sanu.htm |date=2011-06-29 }}
* [http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm Stevan Moljević:Homogenous Serbia]
*[http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm Stevan Moljević:Homogenous Serbia] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205182024/http://www.hic.hr/books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm |date=2012-02-05 }}
* [http://www.hic.hr/books/seeurope/019e-dedijer.htm An end tp the myth of "Greater Serbia"? A rebuttal by a grandson of the man who coined the term]
*[http://www.hic.hr/books/seeurope/019e-dedijer.htm An end to the myth of "Greater Serbia"? A rebuttal by a grandson of the man who coined the term] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629093455/http://www.hic.hr/books/seeurope/019e-dedijer.htm |date=2011-06-29 }}
International sources
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120504142243/http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/IV.htm#II-II The policy creating greater Serbia] (UN report)
*[https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/karadzic/bosnia/serbia.html Greater Serbia in modern times: Paul Garde's opinion]
*[http://www.bosnia.org.uk/news/news_body.cfm?newsid=2202 Bosnia: a single country or an apple of discord?] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923194522/http://www.bosnia.org.uk/news/news_body.cfm?newsid=2202 |date=2015-09-23 }}, [[Bosnian Institute]], 12 May 2006
*[http://www.aimpress.ch/dyn/trae/archive/data/199402/40227-006-trae-beo.htm Serbian-Greek Confederation] as proposed by [[Slobodan Milošević]] and [[Radovan Karadžić|Karadžić]]
*[https://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/18/international/europe/18serbia.html The End of Greater Serbia By Nicholas Wood-The New York Times]
*[http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/ojs/index.php/portal/article/viewFile/90/58 Globalizing the Holocaust: A Jewish 'useable past' in Serbian Nationalism – David MacDonald, University of Otago] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220109204501/https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/ojs/index.php/portal/article/viewFile/90/58 |date=2022-01-09 }}


{{Balkan Wars}}
International sources
* [http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/IV.htm#II-II The policy creating greater Serbia] (UN report)
* [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/karadzic/bosnia/serbia.html Greater Serbia in modern times: Paul Garde's opinion]
* [http://www.bosnia.org.uk/news/news_body.cfm?newsid=2202 Bosnia: a single country or an apple of discord?], [[Bosnian Institute]], 12 May 2006
* [http://www.aimpress.ch/dyn/trae/archive/data/199402/40227-006-trae-beo.htm Serbian-Greek Confederation as proposed by [[Slobodan Milošević]] and [[Radovan Karadžić|Karadžić]] ]
* [http://greaterserbia.info/ GreaterSerbia.info]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/18/international/europe/18serbia.html The End of Greater Serbia By Nicholas Wood-The New York Times] {{en icon}}
* [http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/ojs/index.php/portal/article/viewFile/90/58 Globalizing the Holocaust: A Jewish ‘useable past’ in Serbian Nationalism - David MacDonald, University of Otago] {{en icon}}
{{Irredentism}}
{{Irredentism}}
{{Pan-nationalist concepts}}
[[Category:Greater Serbian ideology]]
[[Category:Montenegro–Serbia relations]]

{{Link FA|bs}}


[[Category:Serbian irredentism| ]]
[[bs:Velika Srbija]]
[[Category:Serbian nationalism in Bosnia and Herzegovina]]
[[bg:Великосръбска доктрина]]
[[Category:Serbian nationalism in Croatia]]
[[cs:Velké Srbsko]]
[[Category:Serbian nationalism in Kosovo]]
[[de:Großserbien]]
[[Category:Serbian nationalism in Montenegro]]
[[es:Gran Serbia]]
[[Category:Serbian nationalism in North Macedonia]]
[[fr:Grande Serbie]]
[[Category:Political terminology of Serbia]]
[[hr:Velika Srbija]]
[[ja:大セルビア]]
[[no:Stor-Serbia]]
[[pl:Wielka Serbia]]
[[pt:Grande Sérvia]]
[[ro:Serbia Mare]]
[[ru:Великая Сербия]]
[[sq:Doktrina e shenjtë serbe]]
[[sl:Velika Srbija]]
[[sr:Велика Србија]]
[[sh:Velika Srbija]]
[[fi:Suur-Serbia]]
[[uk:Велика Сербія]]
[[zh:大塞爾維亞]]

Latest revision as of 12:58, 1 December 2024

One of the visions of the borders of Greater Serbia as advocated by Serbian Radical politician Vojislav Šešelj, defined by the Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag hypothetical boundary to the west.

The term Greater Serbia or Great Serbia (Serbian: Велика Србија, romanizedVelika Srbija) describes the Serbian nationalist and irredentist ideology of the creation of a Serb state which would incorporate all regions of traditional significance to Serbs, a South Slavic ethnic group, including regions outside modern-day Serbia that are partly populated by Serbs.[1] The initial movement's main ideology (Pan-Serbism) was to unite all Serbs (or all territory historically ruled, seen to be populated by, or perceived to be belonging to Serbs) into one state, claiming, depending on the version, different areas of many surrounding countries, regardless of non-Serb populations present.

The Greater Serbian ideology includes claims to various territories aside from modern-day Serbia, including the whole of the former Yugoslavia except Slovenia and part of Croatia. According to Jozo Tomasevich, in some historical forms, Greater Serbian aspirations also included parts of Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania.[2] Its inspiration comes from the medieval Serbian Empire which existed briefly in 14th-century Southeast Europe from 1346 to 1371, prior to the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans. Some territories intended to be incorporated in the Greater Serbia exceeded the boundaries of the Serbian Empire, however.

Historical perspective

[edit]
A map of the 14th-century Serbian Empire

Following the growing nationalistic tendency in Europe from the 18th century onwards, such as the Unification of Italy, Serbia – after first gaining its principality within the Ottoman Empire in 1817 – experienced a popular desire for full unification with the Serbs of the remaining territories, mainly those living in neighbouring entities.[3]

The idea of territorial expansion of Serbia was formulated in 1844 in Načertanije, a secret political draft of the Principality of Serbia made by Ilija Garašanin, a conservative statesman with Bismarckian aspirations.[4] According to the draft, the new Serbian state could include the neighboring areas of Montenegro, Northern Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina.[5] In the early 20th century, all political parties of the Kingdom of Serbia (except for the Social Democratic Party) were planning to create a Balkan Federation, generally accepted the idea of uniting all Serbs into one only Serbian state which would be a part of the Balkan federation.[6] From the creation of the Principality until the First World War, the territory of Serbia was constantly expanding.[7]

After the end of the Balkan Wars, the Kingdom of Serbia achieved the expansion towards the south,[8] but there was a mixed reaction to the events, for the reason that the promises of lands gaining access to the Adriatic Sea were not fulfilled. Instead, Serbia received the territories of Vardar Macedonia that was intended to become part of the Kingdom of Bulgaria and the Serbian Army had to leave those coastal territories that would become part of the newly formed Principality of Albania. This event, together with the Austro-Hungarian Annexation of Bosnia, frustrated Serbian aspirations, since there was still a large number of Serbs remaining out of the Kingdom.[9]

The Serbian victory in the First World War was supposed to serve as compensation to this situation and there was an open debate between the followers of the Greater Serbia doctrine, that defended the incorporation of the parts of the defeated Austro-Hungarian Empire where Serbs lived to Serbia, opposed by the ones that supported an idea of uniting not only all the Serbian lands, but also to include other South Slav nations into a new country. [citation needed]

Miloš Milojević's 19th-century map which depicts most of the South Slavs as Serbs.

The Serbian Royal family of Karađorđević was set to rule this new state, called Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, that would be renamed to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929. Initially, the proponents of the Greater Serbia doctrine felt satisfied, since the main goal of uniting all Serbian-inhabited lands under the rule of a Serbian Monarchic dynasty was mostly achieved. During the inter-war period, the majority of Serbian politicians defended a strong centralised country, while their opponents demanded major autonomy for the regions.

Following the German-led invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941, these tensions grew to become one of the most brutal civil wars that occurred in World War II. The Royal Government soon capitulated and fled to exile in London. Resistance was initially made by the Chetniks, who defended the restoration of the Monarchy but would eventually collaborate with the Axis powers with the goal of forming a post-war Greater Serbia, and the Partisans, a multi-ethnic antifascist movement who waged a guerrilla campaign against occupying forces and supported the transformation of Yugoslavia into a socialist federal republic. The Serbs were largely divided into these two factions with differing ideologies and goals, leading to internal fighting. Others found themselves in the collaborationist factions of Milan Nedić and Dimitrije Ljotić such as the Serbian Volunteer Corps. Beside this, other Yugoslav non-Serb nationalists took advantage of the situation and allied themselves with the Axis countries, regarding this moment as their historical opportunity of fulfilling their own irredentist aspirations. Another portion of non-Serbs also fought under the Partisan movement towards a united communist-led Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

After the war, victorious Partisan leader Marshal Josip Broz Tito became the head of state of Yugoslavia until his death in 1980. During this period the country was divided in six republics. In 1976, within the Socialist Republic of Serbia two autonomous provinces, SAP Kosovo and SAP Vojvodina, were created. During this period, most of the Greater Serbian ideology followers were incarcerated as accused of betrayal, or exiled. Within the rest of the Serbian population, the vast majority became strong supporters of this new Non-Aligned Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

History

[edit]

Obradović's Pan-Serbism

[edit]

The first person to formulate the modern idea of Pan-Serbism was Dositej Obradović (1739–1811), a writer and thinker who dedicated his writings to the "Slavoserbian people", which he described as "the inhabitants of Serbia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Montenegro, Dalmatia, Croatia, Syrmium, Banat, and Bačka", and who he regarded as all his "Serbian brethren, regardless of their church and religion". Other proponents of Pan-Serbism included historian Jovan Rajić and politician and lawyer Sava Tekelija, both of whom published works incorporating many of the aforementioned areas under a single umbrella name of "Serbian lands".[10] The concept of Pan-Serbism espoused by these three was not an imperialist one, based upon the notion of Serbian conquest, but a rationalist one. They all believed that rationalism would overcome the barriers of religion that separated the Slavs into Orthodox Christians, Catholics, and Muslims, uniting the peoples as one nation.

The idea of a unification and homogenization by force was propounded by Petar II Petrović-Njegoš (1813–1851).[10]

Garašanin's Načertanije

[edit]
French map with the supposed borders of the medieval Serbian Empire marked in red, and the supposed Serbian populated-areas coloured green, which more or less corresponds to areas inhabited by all South Slavs.[11]

Some authors claim that the roots of the Greater Serbian ideology can be traced back to Serbian minister Ilija Garašanin's Načertanije (1844).[12] Načertanije (Начертаније) was influenced by "Conseils sur la conduite a suivre par la Serbie", a document written by Polish Prince Adam Czartoryski in 1843 and the revised version by Polish ambassador to Serbia, Franjo Zach, "Zach's Plan".[13][14]

"A plan must be constructed which does not limit Serbia to her present borders, but endeavors to absorb all the Serbian people around her."[12]

— Ilija Garašanin, Načertanije

The work claimed lands that were inhabited by Bulgarians, Macedonians, Albanians, Montenegrins, Bosnians, Hungarians and Croats as part of Greater Serbia.[12] Garašanin's plan also included methods of spreading Serbian influence in the claimed lands.[15] He proposed ways to influence Croats and Slavic Muslims, who Garašanin regarded as "Serbs of Catholic faith" and "Serbs of Islamic faith".[12] The document also emphasized the necessity of cooperation between the Balkan nations and it advocated that the Balkans should be governed by the nations from the Balkans.[16]

This plan was kept secret until 1906 and has been interpreted by some as a blueprint for Serbian national unification, with the primary concern of strengthening Serbia's position by inculcating Serbian and pro-Serbian national ideology in all surrounding peoples that are considered to be devoid of national consciousness.[13][15] Because Načertanije was a secret document until 1906, it could not have affected national consciousness at the popular level. However, some scholars suggest that from the second half of the nineteenth century to the outbreak of World War I, “leading political groups and social strata in Serbia were thoroughly imbued with the ideas in the Nacertanije and differed only in intensity of feeling and political conceptualization”.[17] Political insecurity, more so than Yugoslavism or Serbian nationalism, appeared to be the prevailing reasoning behind the idea of expanding Serbian borders.[18] The document is one of the most contested of nineteenth-century Serbian history, with rival interpretations.[19] Some scholars argue that Garašanin was an inclusive Yugoslavist, while others maintain that he was an exclusive Serbian nationalist seeking a Greater Serbia.[20]

Vuk Karadžić's Pan-Serbism

[edit]

The most notable Serbian linguist of the 19th century, Vuk Karadžić, was a follower of the view that all south Slavs that speak the Shtokavian dialect (of Serbo-Croatian) were Serbs, speaking the Serbian language.[21] As this definition implied that large areas of continental Croatia, Dalmatia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, including areas inhabited by Roman Catholics – Vuk Karadžić is considered by some to be the progenitor of the Greater Serbia program. More precisely, Karadžić was the shaper of modern secular Serbian national consciousness, with the goal of incorporating all indigenous Shtokavian speakers (Eastern Orthodox, Catholic, Muslim) into one, modern Serbian nation. German historian Michael Weithmann considers that Karadžić expressed dangerous ideological and political idea in scientific shape ie that all southern Slavs are Serbs while Czech historian Jan Rychlik consider that Karadžić became a propagator of greater Serbian ideology and uttered a theory according to which all Yugoslav people speaking the shtokavian dialect are Serbs.[22]

Shtokavian dialect, whose speakers Vuk considered Serbs in the 19th century.

There are at least 5 million people who speak the same language, but by religion they can be split into three groups ... Only the first 3 million call themselves Serbs, but the rest will not accept the name.[23]

— Vuk Karadžić, Srbi svi i svuda (Serbs All and Everywhere)

This view is not shared by Andrew Baruch Wachtel (Making a Nation, Breaking a Nation) who sees him as a partisan of South Slav unity, albeit in a limited sense, in that his linguistic definition emphasized what united South Slavs rather than the religious differences that had earlier divided them. However, one might argue that such a definition is very partisan: Karadžić himself eloquently and explicitly professed that his aim was to unite all native Shtokavian speakers whom he identified as Serbs. Therefore, Vuk Karadžić's central linguistic-political aim was the growth of the realm of Serbdom according to his ethnic-linguistic ideas and not a unity of any sort between Serbs and the other nations.

Balkan Wars

[edit]
Greater Serbian aspirations before the Balkan Wars 1912–1913, according to the Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars.[24]

The idea of reclaiming historic Serbian territory has been put into action several times during the 19th and 20th centuries, notably in Serbia's southward expansion in the Balkan Wars. Serbia claimed "historical rights" to the possession of Macedonia, acquired by Stephen Dušan in fourteenth century.[24]: 25–27 

...for economic independence, Serbia must acquire access to the Adriatic Sea and one part of the Albanian coastline: by occupation of the territory or by acquiring economic and transportation rights to this region. This, therefore, implies occupying an ethnographically foreign territory, but one that must be occupied due to particularly important economic interests and vital needs.[25]

Serbia gained significant territorial expansion in the Balkan Wars and almost doubled its territory, with the areas populated mostly by non-Serbs (Albanians, Bulgarians, Turks and others).[24]: 159–164  Serbia's most important goal of the Balkan Wars was access to the open sea.[26] so the Kingdom of Serbia occupied most of the interior of Albania and Albania's Adriatic coast. A series of massacres of Albanians in the Balkan Wars were committed by the Serbian and Montenegrin Army.[24] According to the Report of the International Commission on the Balkan Wars, Serbia consider annexed territories "as a dependency, a sort of conquered colony, which these conquerors might administer at their good pleasure".[24] Newly acquired territories were subjected to military government, and were not included in Serbia's constitutional system.[24] The opposition press demanded the rule of law for the population of the annexed territories and the extension of the constitution of the Kingdom of Serbia to these regions.[24]

The Royal Serbian Army captured Durazzo (Albanian: Durrës) on 29 November 1912 without any resistance.[27] Orthodox Christian metropolitan of Durrës Jakob gave a particularly warm welcome to the new authorities.[28] Due to Jakob's intervention to the Serbian authorities several Albanian guerrilla units were saved and avoided execution.[29]

However, the army of the Kingdom of Serbia retreated from Durrës in April 1913 under pressure of the naval fleet of Great Powers, but it remained in other parts of Albania for the next two months.[30]

Black Hand

[edit]

The secret military society called Unity or Death, popularly known as the Black Hand, headed by Serbian colonel Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis, which took an active and militant stance on the issue of a Greater Serbian state. This organization is believed to have been responsible for numerous atrocities following the Balkan Wars in 1913.[31]

World War I and the creation of Yugoslavia

[edit]
In late November 1918, at the end of the First World War, Syrmia, Banat, Bačka and Baranja, and Montenegro proclaimed its unification with the Kingdom of Serbia and entered into Yugoslavia as part of Serbia (Note: the map shown – Bačka, Banat, Baranja – represents a short time period, during military demarcation, not the actual unified territory).

By 1914 the Greater Serbian concept was eventually replaced by the Yugoslav Pan-Slavic movement. The change in approach was meant as a means to gain support of other Slavs which neighboured Serbs who were also occupied by Austria-Hungary. The intention to create a south Slav or "Yugoslav" state was expressed in the Niš declaration by Serbian prime minister Nikola Pašić in 1914, as well as in Serbia's regent Alexander's statement in 1916. The documents showed that Serbia would pursue a policy that would integrate all territory that contained Serbs and southern Slavs (except Bulgarians), including Croats and Slovenes.[citation needed]

The Treaty of London (1915) of the allies would assign to Serbia the territories of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Srem, Bačka, Slavonia (against Italian objections) and northern Albania (to be divided with Montenegro).[citation needed]

After the First World War, Serbia achieved a maximalist nationalist aspirations with the unification of the south Slavic regions of Austria-Hungary and Montenegro, into a Serbian-dominated Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[32]

During the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, the government of the Kingdom pursued a linguistic Serbisation policy towards the Macedonians in Macedonia,[33] then called "Southern Serbia" (unofficially) or "Vardar Banovina" (officially). The dialects spoken in this region were referred to as dialects of Serbo-Croatian.[34] Either way, those southern dialects were suppressed with regards education, military and other national activities, and their usage was punishable.[35]

World War II and Moljević's Homogenous Serbia

[edit]
Moljević's "Homogenous Serbia", 1941.

During World War II, the Serbian royalist Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland which was headed by General Draža Mihailović attempted to define its vision of a postwar future. One of its intellectuals was the Bosnian Serb nationalist Stevan Moljević who, in 1941, proposed in a paper which was titled "Homogenous Serbia" that an even larger Greater Serbia should be created, incorporating not only Bosnia and much of Croatia but also chunks of Romania, Bulgaria, Albania and Hungary in areas where Serbs don't represent a significant minority. In the territories which were under their military control, the Chetniks waged ethnic cleansing in a genocidal campaign[36][37][38] against ethnic Croats and Bosnian Muslims.[39][40][41]

The Serbs today have a primary and basic duty – to create and organize a homogeneous Serbia which must consist of the entire ethnic territory on which the Serbs live.[42]

It was a point of discussion at a Chetnik congress which was held in the village of Ba in central Serbia in January 1944; however, Moljević's ideas were never put into practice due to the Chetniks' defeat by Josip Broz Tito's Partisans (initially a movement predominantly composed of Serbs which became more multi-ethnic by this time[43]) and it is difficult to assess how influential they were, due to the lack of records from the Ba congress. Nonetheless, Moljević's core idea—that Serbia is defined by the pattern of Serb settlement, irrespective of existing national borders—was to remain an underlying theme of the Greater Serbian ideal.

Role in the dissolution of Yugoslavia

[edit]

SANU Memorandum

[edit]

Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (1986) was the single most important document to set into motion the pan-Serbian movement of the late 1980s which led to Slobodan Milošević's rise to power and the subsequent Yugoslav wars. The authors of the Memorandum included the most influential Serbian intellectuals, among them: Dobrica Ćosić, Pavle Ivić, Antonije Isaković, Dušan Kanazir, Mihailo Marković, Miloš Macura, Dejan Medaković, Miroslav Pantić, Nikola Pantić, Ljubiša Rakić, Radovan Samardžić, Miomir Vukobratović, Vasilije Krestić, Ivan Maksimović, Kosta Mihailović, Stojan Čelić and Nikola Čobelić. Philosopher Christopher Bennett characterized the memorandum as "an elaborate, if crude, conspiracy theory."[44]: 81  The memorandum claimed systematic discrimination against Serbs and Serbia culminating with the allegation that the Serbs of Kosovo and Metohija were being subjected to genocide. According to Bennett, despite most of these claims being obviously absurd, the memorandum was merely one of several similar polemics published at the time.[44]: 81 

The Memorandum's defenders claim that far from calling for a breakup of Yugoslavia on Greater Serbian lines, the document was in favor of Yugoslavia. Its support for Yugoslavia was however conditional on fundamental changes to end what the Memorandum argued was the discrimination against Serbia which was inbuilt into the Yugoslav constitution. The chief of these changes was abolition of the autonomy of Kosovo and Vojvodina. According to Norman Cigar, because the changes were unlikely to be accepted passively, the implementation of the Memorandum's program would only be possible by force.[45]: 24 

Milošević's rise to power

[edit]

With the rise to power of Milošević the Memorandum's discourse became mainstream in Serbia. According to Bennett, Milošević used a rigid control of the media to organize a propaganda campaign in which the Serbs were the victims and stressed the need to readjust Yugoslavia due to the alleged bias against Serbia. This was then followed by Milošević's anti-bureaucratic revolution in which the provincial governments of Vojvodina and Kosovo and the Republican government of Montenegro, were overthrown giving Milošević the dominating position of four votes out of eight in Yugoslavia's collective presidency. Milošević had achieved such a dominant position for Serbia because, according to Bennett, the old communist authorities had failed to stand up to him. During August 1988, supporters of the Anti-Bureaucratic Revolution were reported to have shouted Greater Serbia themed chants of "Montenegro is Serbia!"[46]

Croatia and Slovenia denounced the demands by Milošević for a more centralized system of government in Yugoslavia and they began to demand that Yugoslavia be made a full multi-party confederal state.[47] Milošević claimed that he opposed a confederal system but also declared that should a confederal system be created, the external borders of Serbia would be an "open question", insinuating that his government would pursue creating a Greater Serbia if Yugoslavia was decentralized.[48] Milosevic stated: "These are the questions of borders, essential state questions. The borders, as you know, are always dictated by the strong, never by weak ones."[49]

Dissolution of Yugoslavia (1991–2008)

By this point several opposition parties in Serbia were openly calling for a Greater Serbia, rejecting the then existing boundaries of the Republics as the artificial creation of Tito's partisans. These included Šešelj's Serbian Radical Party, claiming that the recent changes had rectified most of the anti-Serb bias that the Memorandum had alleged. Milošević supported the groups calling for a Greater Serbia, insisting on the demand for "all Serbs in one state". The Socialist Party of Serbia appeared to be defenders of the Serb people in Yugoslavia. Serbian president Slobodan Milošević, who was also the leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia, repeatedly stated that all Serbs should enjoy the right to be included in Serbia.[50] Opponents and critics of Milošević claimed that "Yugoslavia could be that one state but the threat was that, should Yugoslavia break up, then Serbia under Milošević would carve out a Greater Serbia".[51]: 19 

Major changes took place in Yugoslavia in 1990 when free elections brought opposition parties to power in Croatia and Slovenia.[44] In 1990, power had seeped away from the federal government to the republics and were deadlocked over the future of Yugoslavia with the Slovene and Croatian republics seeking a confederacy and Serbia a stronger federation. Gow states, "it was the behavior of Serbia that added to the Croatian and Slovene Republic's belief that no accommodation was possible with the Serbian Republic's leadership". The last straw was on 15 May 1991 when the outgoing Serb president of the collective presidency along with the Serb satellites on the presidency blocked the succession of the Croatian representative Stjepan Mesić as president. According to Gow, from this point on Yugoslavia de facto "ceased to function".[51]: 20 

Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line

[edit]

The Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag line (Serbian: Вировитица–Карловац–Карлобаг линија / Virovitica–Karlovac–Karlobag linija) is a hypothetical boundary that describes the western extent of an irredentist nationalist Serbian state.[52] It defines everything east of this line, KarlobagOgulinKarlovacVirovitica, as a part of Serbia, while the west of it would be within Slovenia, and all which might remain of Croatia. Such a boundary would give the majority of the territory of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to the Serbs.

This line was frequently referenced by Serbian politician Vojislav Šešelj.[53][54]

A greater Serbian state was supported for irredentist as well as economical reasons, as it would give Serbia a large coastline, heavy industries, agricultural farmland, natural resources and all of the crude oil (mostly found in the Pannonian Plain, and particularly in the Socialist Republic of Croatia). There were various Serbian politicians associated with Slobodan Milošević in the early 1990s who publicly espoused such views: Mihalj Kertes, Milan Babić, Milan Martić, Vojislav Šešelj, Stevan Mirković.[55]

In his speeches and books, Šešelj claimed that all of the population of these areas are in fact ethnic Serbs, of Orthodox, Roman Catholic or Muslim faith. However, outside of Šešelj's Serbian Radical Party, the line as such was never promoted in recent Serbian political life.

Yugoslav wars

[edit]
The distribution of Serbs and Montenegrins in Yugoslavia in 1981.
Territories of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republic of Croatia controlled by Serb forces 1992–1995.

Milošević believes he now has the historic opportunity to, once and for all, settle accounts with the Croats and do what Serbian politicians after World War I did not – rally all Serbs in one Serbian state.[50]

— Belgrade newspaper Borba, August 1991.

The war crimes charges against Milošević are based on the allegation that he sought the establishment of a "Greater Serbia". Prosecutors at the Hague argued that "the indictments were all part of a common scheme, strategy or plan on the part of the accused [Milošević] to create a 'Greater Serbia', a centralized Serbian state encompassing the Serb-populated areas of Croatia and Bosnia and all of Kosovo, and that this plan was to be achieved by forcibly removing non-Serbs from large geographical areas through the commission of the crimes charged in the indictments. Although the events in Kosovo were separated from those in Croatia and Bosnia by more than three years, they were no more than a continuation of that plan, and they could only be understood completely by reference to what had happened in Croatia and Bosnia."[56]

The Hague Trial Chamber found that the strategic plan of the Bosnian Serb leadership consisted of "a plan to link Serb-populated areas in BiH together, to gain control over these areas and to create a separate Bosnian Serb state, from which most non-Serbs would be permanently removed".[57] It also found that media in certain areas focused only on Serb Democratic Party policy and reports from Belgrade became more prominent, including the presentation of extremist views and promotion of the concept of a Greater Serbia, just as in other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina the concept of a Greater Croatia was openly advocated.[58]

Vuk Drašković, leader of the Serbian Renewal Movement, called for the creation of a Greater Serbia which would include Serbia, Kosovo, Vojvodina, Macedonia and Montenegro, as well as regions within Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia with high concentrations of Serbs.[50] About 160,000 Croats were expelled from territories Serbian forces sought to control.[59]

Much of the fighting in the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s was the result of an attempt to keep Serbs unified. Mihailo Marković, the Vice President of the Main Committee of Serbia's Socialist Party, rejected any solution that would make Serbs outside Serbia a minority. He proposed establishing a federation consisting of Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and Serbs residing in the Serbian Autonomous Region of Krajina, Slavonia, Baranja, and Srem.[50]

Later developments

[edit]
Vojislav Šešelj, president of the Serbian Radical Party, is one of the staunchest advocates of Greater Serbia.

So I say: if a Greater Serbia should be held by committing crime, I would never accept it; may Greater Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime – no. If it were necessary to hold only a small Serbia by crime, I would not accept it. May small Serbia disappear, but to hold it by crime – no. And if there is only one Serb, and if I am that last Serb, to hold on by crime – I do not accept. May we disappear, but disappear as humans, because then we will not disappear, we will be alive in the hands of the living God.[60]

The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) accused Slobodan Milošević and other Serb leaders of committing crimes against humanity which included murder, forcible population transfer, deportation and "persecution on political, racial or religious grounds." Tribunal prosecutor's office has accused Milosevic of "the gravest violations of human rights in Europe since the Second World War and genocide."[59]

Serbian historian Sima Ćirković stated that grumblings about Greater Serbia and pointing fingers at Garašanin's Načertanije and the "Memorandum" is not helping to solve the existing problems and that it is an abuse of history.[61]

Serbian academic Čedomir Popov considers that the allegations of "Greater Serbian intentions" are often used for politically anti-Serbian interests and that they are factually incorrect. Popov stated that throughout the Serbian history there never was nor ever will be a Greater Serbia.[62]

In 2008, Aleksandar Vučić, a former member of the Serbian Radical Party, which advocated the creation of a Greater Serbia, stated that Šešelj's vision of Greater Serbian was unrealistic and that idea of Greater Serbia was unrealistic at the moment because of balance of power held by the great powers.[63]

Recent events

[edit]

In 2011, there was a movement calling for the unification of Republika Srpska with Serbia. This idea is detested by Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina where it is seen as an act of breaking the Dayton Agreement, while Serbs see it as an example of self-determination.[64]

Serbian world

[edit]

Ever since 2020, a new term called "Serbian world" (Serbian: Srpski svet) came to use among prominent Serbian politicians such as Aleksandar Vulin. In November 2024, while speaking in Banja Luka, Vulin as a deputy prime minister of Serbia said that "process of creation of Serbian world, process of unification, had begun".[65][66] Several regional media outlets and political commentators interpreted this term as a replacement for the earlier concept of "Greater Serbia".[67][68][69] On June 8, 2024, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić hosted the Pan-Serb Assembly in Belgrade, bringing together representatives of Serbs from across the former Yugoslavia. According to politologist Alexander Rhotert, who quotes Vulin, the main objective of the assembly was to excecute the strategic goal of Serbian world, which is creation of "political and state territory" on which all Serbs would live and which would be a somewhat smaller version of Greater Serbia.[70] The assembly produced General Serb Declaration; the document asserts that Kosovo is an integral part of Serbia, and Republika Srpska is being considered a "national interest of Serbia".[71] Prime minister of Serbia Miloš Vučević in December 2024 stated that one of the projects related to aforementioned General Serb Declaration is a construction of Trebinje airport in Eastern Herzegovina.[72]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 167–168.
  2. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 168.
  3. ^ Cole, Jeffrey E. (2011). Ethnic Groups of Europe: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 335. ISBN 978-1-59884-303-3.
  4. ^ Djilas, Aleksa (1991). The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution, 1919-1953. Harvard University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-67416-698-1.
  5. ^ "Ilija Garasanin's "Nacertanije": A Reasessment". Rastko.org.rs. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2010-08-04.
  6. ^ Banac 1988, p. 110.
  7. ^ Anzulovic 1999, p. 89.
  8. ^ Frucht, Richard C. (2005). Eastern Europe - Volume 3. ABC-CLIO. p. 540. ISBN 978-1-57607-800-6. ..the two Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913 , which expanded Serbian territory to the south..
  9. ^ Duiker, William J.; Spielvogel, Jackson J. (2015). World History, Volume II: Since 1500. Nelson Education. p. 569. ISBN 978-1-30553-780-4.
  10. ^ a b Anzulovic 1999, pp. 71–73.
  11. ^ Thiers, Henri (1862). La Serbie: Son Passé et Son Avenir. Dramard-Baudry.
  12. ^ a b c d Cohen 1996, p. 3.
  13. ^ a b Anzulovic 1999, p. 91.
  14. ^ Trencsenyi & Kopecek 2007, p. 240.
  15. ^ a b Cohen 1996, pp. 3–4.
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  18. ^ Manetovic 2006, p. 160.
  19. ^ Trencsenyi & Kopecek 2007, p. 239.
  20. ^ Manetovic 2006, p. 137.
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  22. ^ Melichárek 2015, p. 59.
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  30. ^ Antić (2010) "VeĆ u aprilu 1913. postalo je izvesno da je kraj "albanske operacije" blizu. Pod pritiskom flote velikih sila srpska vojska je napustila jadransko primorje. U Albaniji je, međutim, ostala još dva meseca... In April 1913 it was obvious that end of "Albanian operation" was close and army of Serbia retreated from Adriatic coast remaining in Albania for two more months."
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Literature

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From Project Rastko website:

From Croatian Information Centre website:

International sources